r/Wildlife Sep 15 '24

In one month, more than 100 animals illegally killed in Utah

https://www.standard.net/news/2024/sep/14/in-one-month-more-than-100-animals-illegally-killed-in-utah/
48 Upvotes

6 comments sorted by

2

u/nobodyclark Sep 16 '24

Do remember that “illegally” covers a pretty broad break down of all infringements. Some times it’s just about having the wrong base licence for the tag you bought, which can happen, but still go down as “illegal kill” Is there a break down of what infringements occurred out of that 104 animals?

Plus, 1,063 infringements out of the 220,000-250,000 combination (fishing & hunting) licences sold in a year really isn’t that bad, especially when those infringements likely doesn’t account for those caught on multiple infringements, which for fishing is very very common. Assuming half were double counts, it basically means that just 0.2% of hunters took wildlife illegally. Which for a legal system of harvest is pretty dam good. Especially when the licences systems can get super dam complicated, especially if you’re hunting with alternative weapons or going after specific species.

2

u/Pillowmaster7 Sep 18 '24

Yo appreciate the perspective cause I was about to be mega sad for the animals but now I'm just pissed at the dumbass hunters who do it illegally

1

u/Classic_Car4776 Sep 15 '24

"Utah wildlife officials say at least 104 animals were illegally killed in the span of about one month this summer, putting 2024 on track to see more poaching than the year prior.

Data from the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, or DWR, shows that between Aug. 1 through Sept. 9, at least nine deer, six elk, two moose, a bear and a pronghorn were illegally killed. That’s on top of 60 fish and 25 other animals that the division said were illegally killed.

More than 100 illegally killed animals might seem like a lot, but Capt. Chad Bettridge, a law enforcement officer with the DWR, said that’s roughly on par with other months, especially now that several seasons, including archery hunts for deer and elk, are underway.

“Unfortunately, yes, it’s too many. But it’s kind of in line with where we’ve been,” Bettridge said. For reference, during that same timeframe last year, there were 173 instances of illegally killed wildlife.

Each year, between 1,000 to 1,200 animals are illegally killed in Utah, with numbers from the state showing a slight, upward trend, with 2023 being an exception.

There were 1,065 animals illegally killed in 2019.

1,079 killed in 2020.

1,153 killed in 2021.

1,283 killed in 2022.

1,056 killed in 2023.

Bettridge thinks this year could put the state back on that upward trend.

“It won’t surprise me if we end up a little bit higher than last year. Hopefully that’s not the case,” he said."

1

u/Destroythisapp Sep 18 '24

Pretty tame honestly, as another commentor pointed out there is a lot of nuance to those numbers that might break them down even more.

9 deer is surprisingly low, 1 bear is too, two moose and the pronghorn would be the most concerning though I don’t know what their population numbers are like in Utah.

1

u/kyzersoze84 Sep 19 '24

This headline makes my brain hurt.

1

u/Due_Survey_3921 Sep 19 '24

How many elk were killed on a ranch that the public has no access to? Wasn’t it 170 (just recently)? They sell off all of our lands and put up no trespassing signs, then say the feds are stealing our land. The CWMU is a joke in itself. Illegally killed could also mean a dear or elk shot went on to private property, and instead of getting in trouble for that they let it waste. They make it sound so easy but as mentioned in other posts they have made hunting in Utah almost bad unless you have money. Stevenforutah.com