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The Human Predator
The following statement may not sit well with
some people, but I believe it to be true. Whether eating hamburgers at your
local fast food restaurant, having eggs and bacon for breakfast, or munching on
a lean venison steak, you are a predator — an animal that lives by killing and
eating other animals. Sure, you don't participate in the actual killing of a
steer or hog, but you share in the product of that killing. The people who kill
our domestic animals in slaughter houses are merely agents of our society,
acting on our behalf. Because we choose to eat meat, we share in the
responsibility for killing those animals. We are predators.
Even if you're a vegetarian, chances are you
share this predacious responsibility. If you wear leather belts or shoes,
fertilize your garden with bone meal, feed your dog, cat or tropical fish, or
use certain medicines or cosmetic preparations, you are a predator. Animals died
by the hands of people to provide these products.
Consider the produce we buy in the supermarket
and place on our tables. Hunting helps bring many of those products to market
cheaply. Many deer and elk hunting seasons and bag limits are set to reduce
damage to crops, whether they be alfalfa, soy beans, or strawberries and wine
grapes. For example, in Alberta this year, additional hunting licences have been
placed on sale to help reduce the damage deer and elk have been causing to
crops. Without hunting, the prices for our produce would be greater. Indeed,
without recreational hunting,
governments would be forced to control these wildlife populations by other means
— again, acting as an agent for us all.
Humans have been predators for a long time —
as evidenced by the skin scraping and meat cutting tools found at
anthropological sites around the world. Our teeth and digestive organs are those
of an animal that readily eats both meat and vegetation — much like bears.
Predation is also a source of our intelligence.
An animal that grazes solely on plants doesn't have to solve the complex
problems that predators must solve to obtain food. Plants are stationary, they
don't run on your approach. You just have to know where they are in the right
season. On the other hand, a predator must understand something of the behavior
of its prey — where it will be, how it will react. It also must make
complicated decisions in a hurry as circumstances change during the hunt.
Think of the wild animals we judge to be the
most intelligent — for example: coyotes, wolves, cougars, bears. Most are
predators. Now think of the popular pets we've judged to be intelligent — dogs
and cats. We consider them intelligent because they can solve relatively complex
problems and indeed judge and relate to our own behavior. This intelligence was
not acquired by accident. It evolved with a predatory lifestyle.
Our intelligence developed in a similar way.
When our ancestors decided to exploit wild animals for food, their perspective
on the world changed. They had to learn more about and understand other animals,
to further understand the nuances of their environment, and to understand how
that environment could be changed to aid the hunt and their community.
That understanding has caused us to be the most
successful species on the planet. It has also given us an arrogance that we can
solve any problem, even while ignoring the environment and our relationships
with it.
As a hunter, I have chosen not to ignore these
fundamental relationships. By hunting, I acknowledge them, and seek to
understand them better. That is why I contribute both time and money to wildlife
conservation. I know in my heart why we cannot afford to lose these connections
with the natural world.
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