Hunting vs. Endangered Hunting

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Replies

  • sc003ro
    sc003ro Posts: 227 Member
    Hey kids.. here is a little fun fact.
    Here in America (as someone else pointed out, that is what we are talking about), most grocery stores have a three day supply of food.
    What this means to you and me is that, if for some reason, the trucks stopped delivering food, the stores would be empty in three days.
    Right now, in America, about 2% of the population is in the agriculture industry.
    They can keep eating.
    The other 98% of us (myself included) are kinda screwed.
    There are a group of people out there who know how to hunt and/or garden so, they are in a better position then those who have no choice but to rely on the grocery store.
    I am not a hunter. I do not like killing animals and this included spiders and cochroaches.
    With that said, I did take a safe hunders course here in Florida and I am very much looking forward to going on my first hog hunt.
    I believe it is the duty of every family head to provide for his family and I will be damned if my family is going to starve to death because I never took the time to learn a skill that is becoming a lost art.

    well said ...bravo
  • RockWarrior84
    RockWarrior84 Posts: 840 Member
    Hey kids.. here is a little fun fact.
    Here in America (as someone else pointed out, that is what we are talking about), most grocery stores have a three day supply of food.
    What this means to you and me is that, if for some reason, the trucks stopped delivering food, the stores would be empty in three days.
    Right now, in America, about 2% of the population is in the agriculture industry.
    They can keep eating.
    The other 98% of us (myself included) are kinda screwed.
    There are a group of people out there who know how to hunt and/or garden so, they are in a better position then those who have no choice but to rely on the grocery store.
    I am not a hunter. I do not like killing animals and this included spiders and cochroaches.
    With that said, I did take a safe hunders course here in Florida and I am very much looking forward to going on my first hog hunt.
    I believe it is the duty of every family head to provide for his family and I will be damned if my family is going to starve to death because I never took the time to learn a skill that is becoming a lost art.


    well said
  • xFamousLastWordsx
    xFamousLastWordsx Posts: 301 Member

    It's fascinating the way people judge each other...

    It really is. And I find it amazing that, in my personal experience with people I know first hand, the people that have the moral and ethical problems with kiling animals are the ones that support abortion and are pro-choice. Don't kill animals, but its ok to kill a child. It makes no sense at all to me....but to each his/her own I guess.

    Now, pass the venison and lets go make out on my zebra rug......

    I'm against killing animals but am absolutely pro-choice. I love animals, I really don't care about people or what they want/don't want to do to their offspring...it makes sense to me and I guess that's all that matters.

    So, if I have kids, and decide I don't want them anymore, you think its ok to kill them? Just do not kill animals? O....K.

    Backs slowly away.....

    Pretty much...do what you want to your own kids...I really don't care. I like animals so I have compassion for them, I don't like most people therefore I don't care about them. I'm very aware that my opinion is an unpopular one but that's fine... I never asked anyone to agree with me or understand it.

    how do you feel about infanticide in animals? e.g. lions or baboons killing the offspring of the pride/troop upon taking it over? Studies have shown that female baboons with infants experience a high level of stress and anxiety when an outsider male takes over the troop because she knows he's probably going to kill her baby.

    I like primates generally, but I think baboons are evil little *****. I know they're not clever enough to know any better (but they are damn clever for a monkey species) but they are nasty and I'm really glad I'm not a baboon. I like how apes, humans and bonobos especially, have evolved compassion and empathy, in spite of having a common ancestor with baboons.

    It's nature. I feel bad about people killing animals..we can choose not to. Other animals are going to kill eachother be it for food or other reasons, it's part of nature and I can accept that.
  • LadyFlexible
    LadyFlexible Posts: 108 Member
    I disagree with endangered hunting.

    However, there is nothing wrong with hunting for food or overpopulation.
    Saying it's arrogant and disgusting is quite ignorant, arrogant in itself, and bigoted. Also calling it murder is equivocation.You don't want to hunt and can't stomach it, don't hunt.


    Also it is quite insane to not have consideration or caring for your own species considering. It is always going to be your species that takes care of you. For most people it's almost biologically ingrained that between one species and your own, your species comes first You might have dogs and cats that exist because they are can be related and helpful. That's not arrogance in fact an abuse of the word.It's common practice Not every member is going to rainbow and sunshine.

    ^Comment above that isn't true for everyone. Unless, I need to remind you of hunter gather groups and the fact unlike you and I who can say let's stop screwing/put on a condom/use BC. If disease breaks out, we can find the source and quarentine so that it doesn't kill off our species. For animals once, a virus or disease starts spreading there is no stopping it. Unless, there is outside intervention.

    Also, we're apart of nature. We might have made it somewhat away from the food chain. However, nature still effects us. While we're dependent somewhat, nature is a bit of a psycho*****. All animals work to survive said psycho*****. We're still trying to survive said psycho*****.
    I'm not saying everything we do is good. We have made mistakes that have either shot us in the foot, other species in the foot, or even both. The thing is we can fix our mistakes I'm just saying nature is a pyscho*****.
  • neandermagnon
    neandermagnon Posts: 7,436 Member
    Even some animals such as the elephant need to be hunted in some areas. Take for example, Botswana. Elephants in that country are overpopulated, and not only destroy crops, but are deforesting the country. The elephants will come in huge herds, pushing over trees to eat the tender leaves near the top....then move on to push over more. They trample and destroy farmers' fields and villagers gardens. In these poverty stricken areas, a hunter comes in from the United States, or wherever, bringing a huge amount of money into the economy. They pay a license fee, they pay the outfitter, and the trackers, who are local. When they kill an elephant, that is usually selected specifically because of its destructive nature......they immediately pay another huge fee that goes into the local economy. (often in excess of $50,000) Then, the local people typically are allowed to skin the elephant and they use all of its flesh for food....food that they would not otherwise have. The hunter gets the trophy, the excitement of the chase, and the memories of the hunt, and the environment and the local economy is boosted because of it.

    By this logic we should start hunting humans...aren't we the most destructive animals of all? We destroy much more of the enviroment than any other animal on the planet and push all the other species around as we please. Just playing devils advocate...

    Ironically, it's the few remaining hunter-gatherer populations that do the least amount of environmental damage and who have the most sustainable lifestyles. Hunter-gathering has been proven to be the most long lasting ecological strategy, neanderthals and their ancestors lived for 600,000+ years as hunter-gatherers in Europe... Homo erectus lasted over a million years... Homo sapiens only evolved 160,000 years ago and lived exclusively as hunter-gatherers until 10,000 years ago..... and in less than 10,000 years, non-hunter-gatherer Homo sapiens have done a huge amount of damage to the environment and need to make some pretty drastic changes if they're to stand any chance of lasting as long as earlier human species.

    so by that logic, maybe we should ban agriculture and industry and only allow hunting and gathering as a means to get food, and let natural selection take care of the overpopulation........

    (not really suggesting this, just playing devil's advocate)
  • Cryptonomnomicon
    Cryptonomnomicon Posts: 848 Member
    Just in conclusion to my previous statements, I had no desire to argue the ethical points of hunting, dietary preferences (omnivore/vegan) etc I just found the statement concerning "there are no cons to hunting" by a self-professed non-hunter to be both ignorant and arrogant...be you for or against hunting I am sure you can see the ridiculous nature of the statement.

    Concerning the accidents I posted, yes accidents happen in every aspect of life no doubt about it! but I was just illustrating some very real cons to show the absurdity of the statement.

    Personally I try to stay away from debates such as this as people have different moral/ethical codes that are driven by many factors be it emotional, logical etc.

    Reminds me of what someone wrote on their feed the other day "You may have the right to an opinion, but I do not have to respect the opinion because you have the right to it!"

    an accident is not a "con" to hunting. When you say pros or cons it is directly related to the hunting or killing of animals. Your saying there would be a con to driving a car is you would die in an accident. CMon dude.

    pros and cons
    noun
    the favorable and the unfavorable factors or reasons; advantages and disadvantages.


    Getting accidentally shot would be an unfavorable outcome of hunting ergo Con! or getting in car accident is also a con...why they invented seat-belts and airbags. I am not saying it will happen but it does happen on occasion...I would conclude that accidents do happen hunting as I have illustrated, I am sure actual hunters would agree this is a reality since they have been known to wear safety vests, have safety instructors etc to minimize this from happening. So yes it is a con of hunting.

    I am out, clearly you are vested in the idea that your statement was not ridiculous.
  • Dragonwolf
    Dragonwolf Posts: 5,600 Member
    there are quite a few hunter-gatherer populations remaining in some remote parts of the world - in a lot of cases their entire way of life is under threat, including by narrow-minded conservationists that want to ban all humans from hunting. Never mind that they've hunted sustainably in the places they live for tens of thousands of years.

    I seriously object to your blanket statements about hunters. Just because you knew a bunch of hunters that did stuff you didn't like doesn't mean they're all like that.

    I don't agree with hunting for trophy only if the meat is not going to be eaten, or if it's not necessary for conservation (e.g. culling populations to prevent overpopulation, which will in the end harm the very population you're culling) or protecting other populations (e.g. killing a wolf that's done unprovoked attacks on humans). But that doesn't mean that there's anything wrong with ecologically sustainable hunting for food, whether you're from a hunter-gatherer population or an agricultural or industrial population. So to answer the question regarding endangered species - if it's likely to lead to an animal's extinction, then no, because that's not sustainable.

    Also, hunted meat v farmed meat... I don't see much difference except that you know the wild animal lived free for its whole life instead of in a farm... there are plenty of farms that treat their animals humanely as well as many that don't. So I'm not against farmed meat either, but farmers do have a responsibility to treat animals ethically. And while I respect the choices of people as individuals who choose to be vegetarian, it's not possible for the whole world to go vegetarian. Humans are omnivores, not herbivores.

    I have heard all his before and do not care
    at all

    my blanket statement is how I feel and it will never change hunting as it is especially in North America (which is the kind of hunting being discussed in this thread) is arrogant , pathetic and disgusting

    So...you'd rather animals die of disease, and both animals and humans die of starvation?

    While I agree that trophy hunting for its own sake is stupid, wasteful, and, frankly, d*ckish, the bulk of hunting that goes on in North America is actually for conservation purposes, including population control, since we no longer have sufficient apex predators such as cougars and wolves to keep most of the populations healthy. Not doing so results in the slow and painful deaths of the very animals you claim to care about, from disease and starvation.

    Most of the people who hunt do so to feed themselves or others, no different from any other animal. I personally know several people who have made it through the year pretty much solely from hunting, my own family included. But go ahead and enjoy the privilege you have to be able to be a vegan and not have to worry about starving.
  • QueenBishOTUniverse
    QueenBishOTUniverse Posts: 14,121 Member
    can you link me to all the studies on this? I'm really interested in this topic, usually in relation to humans, human ancestors and species that are closely related to humans but I'm also interested in the topic generally. I've not seen any specific studies in sentience on apes, just a whole lot on language and other aspects of cognition. I've seen scientific discussions on the question of awareness of life and death - mostly related to archaeological evidence for deliberate burial and ritual disposal of the dead in early human species.... and chimpanzees and bonobos grieve for dead loved ones (some real tearjerker clips on you tube of mother chimpanzees and bonobos parting with dead infants :cry: ) and recognise each other as individuals (I think most higher primates recognise each other as individuals).... but nothing specific on sentience that I can recall (maybe it was covered at uni and I forgot about it..)

    anyway I'm genuinely curious about this (I know stuff gets misconstrued on the internet and usually people ask for research papers to make someone prove a point when debating, but I'm really just very curious and not trying to argue at all)

    LOL, I'm a few years out of my graduate studies as well and this isn't my specific field, not to mention I don't have direct access to the journals the way I did when I was still at UCLA but here's what I've been able to dig up over my lunch break:

    This one seems especially apropos to the discussion of the use of domesticated animals but I can't claim to be familiar with the journal it is published in:
    http://www.appliedanimalbehaviour.com/article/S0168-1591(09)00039-2/abstract?cc=y=?cc=y=

    The abstract on this one cracks me up, wish I still got this journal. We can't even agree on what constitutes "behavior" so trying to establish a working definition for sentience is problematic to say the least. I tend to stick with the mirror test but....

    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003347209001730
    Behavioural biologists do not agree on what constitutes behaviour
    Animal Behaviour, Volume 78, Issue 1, July 2009, Pages 103-110

    And crap, this one came out since I left school, Nooooooo!

    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003347209003571
    Pigs learn what a mirror image represents and use it to obtain information
    Animal Behaviour, Volume 78, Issue 5, November 2009, Pages 1037-1041

    I can't get full text on these from here, but if you know how clue me in because I want to read them myself, but Animal Behavior is one of the leading journals for this field so they should be good.
  • ItsCasey
    ItsCasey Posts: 4,021 Member
    Right now, in America, about 2% of the population is in the agriculture industry.
    They can keep eating.
    The other 98% of us (myself included) are kinda screwed.

    Yep.

    I lived in Houston when Hurricanes Katrina and Rita hit the Gulf Coast. After Rita, it was 2 weeks before the grocery stores were fully stocked again, and people were breaking into homes to steal FOOD. This is no joke. People will do crazy things when they feel like their ability to maintain their current quality of life is threatened. That's nothing compared to what would happen if people's actual survival were threatened.

    It's easy to sit on the throne of moral absolutism and act like you're better than hunters when you can drive to Whole Foods and buy a rotisserie chicken. It's not so funny when there's no chicken left and you don't know where your next meal is coming from.
  • neandermagnon
    neandermagnon Posts: 7,436 Member
    can you link me to all the studies on this? I'm really interested in this topic, usually in relation to humans, human ancestors and species that are closely related to humans but I'm also interested in the topic generally. I've not seen any specific studies in sentience on apes, just a whole lot on language and other aspects of cognition. I've seen scientific discussions on the question of awareness of life and death - mostly related to archaeological evidence for deliberate burial and ritual disposal of the dead in early human species.... and chimpanzees and bonobos grieve for dead loved ones (some real tearjerker clips on you tube of mother chimpanzees and bonobos parting with dead infants :cry: ) and recognise each other as individuals (I think most higher primates recognise each other as individuals).... but nothing specific on sentience that I can recall (maybe it was covered at uni and I forgot about it..)

    anyway I'm genuinely curious about this (I know stuff gets misconstrued on the internet and usually people ask for research papers to make someone prove a point when debating, but I'm really just very curious and not trying to argue at all)

    LOL, I'm a few years out of my graduate studies as well and this isn't my specific field, not to mention I don't have direct access to the journals the way I did when I was still at UCLA but here's what I've been able to dig up over my lunch break:

    This one seems especially apropos to the discussion of the use of domesticated animals but I can't claim to be familiar with the journal it is published in:
    http://www.appliedanimalbehaviour.com/article/S0168-1591(09)00039-2/abstract?cc=y=?cc=y=

    The abstract on this one cracks me up, wish I still got this journal. We can't even agree on what constitutes "behavior" so trying to establish a working definition for sentience is problematic to say the least. I tend to stick with the mirror test but....

    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003347209001730
    Behavioural biologists do not agree on what constitutes behaviour
    Animal Behaviour, Volume 78, Issue 1, July 2009, Pages 103-110

    And crap, this one came out since I left school, Nooooooo!

    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003347209003571
    Pigs learn what a mirror image represents and use it to obtain information
    Animal Behaviour, Volume 78, Issue 5, November 2009, Pages 1037-1041

    I can't get full text on these from here, but if you know how clue me in because I want to read them myself, but Animal Behavior is one of the leading journals for this field so they should be good.

    thanks :) that's really interesting :)

    I don't know how to get the full text either... I'm forever looking at abstracts.... it depends on the journal, some make the full text available after a certain amount of time has passed. but for the newer studies, I don't think you can without a subscription or being in a computer suite of a university that has a subscription for student access to the journals
  • QueenBishOTUniverse
    QueenBishOTUniverse Posts: 14,121 Member
    Even some animals such as the elephant need to be hunted in some areas. Take for example, Botswana. Elephants in that country are overpopulated, and not only destroy crops, but are deforesting the country. The elephants will come in huge herds, pushing over trees to eat the tender leaves near the top....then move on to push over more. They trample and destroy farmers' fields and villagers gardens. In these poverty stricken areas, a hunter comes in from the United States, or wherever, bringing a huge amount of money into the economy. They pay a license fee, they pay the outfitter, and the trackers, who are local. When they kill an elephant, that is usually selected specifically because of its destructive nature......they immediately pay another huge fee that goes into the local economy. (often in excess of $50,000) Then, the local people typically are allowed to skin the elephant and they use all of its flesh for food....food that they would not otherwise have. The hunter gets the trophy, the excitement of the chase, and the memories of the hunt, and the environment and the local economy is boosted because of it.

    By this logic we should start hunting humans...aren't we the most destructive animals of all? We destroy much more of the enviroment than any other animal on the planet and push all the other species around as we please. Just playing devils advocate...

    That actually might be a good sport. Have you ever read "The Most Dangerous Game"?

    Ahem, my husband's former boss owns a company that produces gun holsters. He is a world renowned shooter. He has done endangered species hunting. He has also gone out with the game wardens in South Africa and hunted the poachers, and I do mean that literally.
  • SaintGiff
    SaintGiff Posts: 3,679 Member
    I'm not a hunter or particularly eco conscious, so I have no opinion other than "I'd hit that."

    I'm not gonna lie. I opened this thread by mistake. Read the OP, had zero interest, about to close thread when I saw that comment. Clicked link. Agree. Would hit. Done with thread now.
  • EmpireBusiness
    EmpireBusiness Posts: 333 Member
    51969770.jpg
  • patrickblo13
    patrickblo13 Posts: 831 Member
    I love the people saying hunting is disgusting but I bet they have no issue chowing down a burger from a cow that was killed in a slaughter house in a much less humane way.....makes zero sense
  • Dragonwolf
    Dragonwolf Posts: 5,600 Member
    Right now, in America, about 2% of the population is in the agriculture industry.
    They can keep eating.
    The other 98% of us (myself included) are kinda screwed.

    Yep.

    I lived in Houston when Hurricanes Katrina and Rita hit the Gulf Coast. After Rita, it was 2 weeks before the grocery stores were fully stocked again, and people were breaking into homes to steal FOOD. This is no joke. People will do crazy things when they feel like their ability to maintain their current quality of life is threatened. That's nothing compared to what would happen if people's actual survival were threatened.

    It's easy to sit on the throne of moral absolutism and act like you're better than hunters when you can drive to Whole Foods and buy a rotisserie chicken. It's not so funny when there's no chicken left and you don't know where your next meal is coming from.

    And that's why I'll be hauling *kitten* to the mountains if/when I survive some catastrophic event. Get away from the crazies who no longer know how to survive without society.... :laugh:
  • Kymom04
    Kymom04 Posts: 41 Member
    I agree! My fiance hunts deer where we live. Thats food for my family! Nothing wrong with hunting. If she wasn't allowed to do it, they would stop her.
  • Dragonwolf
    Dragonwolf Posts: 5,600 Member
    Even some animals such as the elephant need to be hunted in some areas. Take for example, Botswana. Elephants in that country are overpopulated, and not only destroy crops, but are deforesting the country. The elephants will come in huge herds, pushing over trees to eat the tender leaves near the top....then move on to push over more. They trample and destroy farmers' fields and villagers gardens. In these poverty stricken areas, a hunter comes in from the United States, or wherever, bringing a huge amount of money into the economy. They pay a license fee, they pay the outfitter, and the trackers, who are local. When they kill an elephant, that is usually selected specifically because of its destructive nature......they immediately pay another huge fee that goes into the local economy. (often in excess of $50,000) Then, the local people typically are allowed to skin the elephant and they use all of its flesh for food....food that they would not otherwise have. The hunter gets the trophy, the excitement of the chase, and the memories of the hunt, and the environment and the local economy is boosted because of it.

    By this logic we should start hunting humans...aren't we the most destructive animals of all? We destroy much more of the enviroment than any other animal on the planet and push all the other species around as we please. Just playing devils advocate...

    That actually might be a good sport. Have you ever read "The Most Dangerous Game"?

    Ahem, my husband's former boss owns a company that produces gun holsters. He is a world renowned shooter. He has done endangered species hunting. He has also gone out with the game wardens in South Africa and hunted the poachers, and I do mean that literally.

    Well, that's one way to handle the problem.
  • Slacker16
    Slacker16 Posts: 1,184 Member
    I don't really understand trophy hunting.

    Good job - you murdered an animal to decorate your home. You're so cool.

    Hunting for food, and population control, I have no issue with.
    +1

    Hunting, as an economic activity, is no crueler than fishing or herding. In fact, it's arguably less cruel than raising animals (for one purpose or another) since at least the hunted animal gets to live its life in its natural habitat.

    Flying halfway across the globe just to kill an animal that will look cool stuffed is more of a penor substitute.

    ETA : considering how many effed up things human beings do to fellow human beings, I'm not too phased by hunting or eating intelligent animals. They tend to taste terrible, however.
  • tycho_mx
    tycho_mx Posts: 426 Member
    I do have a problem with hunting endangered animals. Or damaging sensitive habitats through encroachment, overexploitation, etc. Those could prove to be useful in many ways, irrespective of your ethical stance.

    I have no problem with hunting in general. Or fishing. Or farming. I eat meat, I eat vegetables. I consider human an omnivore. I do think there is a case for rational use of resources, so I don't support much factory farming (I eat little meat, mostly free-range except for some chickens). Just on account of environmental damage. I also try to eat fish from sustainable sources.

    Hunting is not a sport, though. Neither is farming. Neither is darts or snooker (even if ESPN shows it). There is no real "contest" or competition in hunting (or bullfighting) and we all know who the loser will be, barring catastrophic accident. Yes, it might be exciting and exhilarating. So is crossing the highway.
  • Dragonwolf
    Dragonwolf Posts: 5,600 Member
    I love the people saying hunting is disgusting but I bet they have no issue chowing down a burger from a cow that was killed in a slaughter house in a much less humane way.....makes zero sense

    In my experience, most of the ones that say all hunting is disgusting are vegans.

    What cracks me up, though, are the ones that say animals are defenseless. These people have clearly never encountered something like a large bear or feral pig...
  • T1DCarnivoreRunner
    T1DCarnivoreRunner Posts: 11,502 Member
    I am a hunter myself, but I eat everything (yes, EVERYTHING!! - since I don't eat coyote or bobcat, I don't hunt them) I kill when I hunt. Also, I sometimes kill animals for protection (usually insects) or accidentally while driving. I do not hunt rare, endangered, threatened, etc. animals (I'm not saying she is, but it doesn't explain what sub-species of elephant she is hunting so we don't really know).

    With that said, I don't support what this girl is doing. She is going out dressed up and with make-up (did you not see her pics?) with a camera crew, and killing animals for the fun of it. Some will argue that she is feeding people. Some will say that she is contributing to research. The fact that she brought a camera crews proves her real motivation: she wants attention and popularity. I do not believe for a second that, if she were to have to go out in the real wilderness (not a game preserve with all the animals fenced into the area), without a gun or bow, she could survive very long. She is not a true outdoorswoman who wants to be a part of nature; she is a wealthy Texan with a bloodlust too big even for Texas.
  • QueenBishOTUniverse
    QueenBishOTUniverse Posts: 14,121 Member
    can you link me to all the studies on this? I'm really interested in this topic, usually in relation to humans, human ancestors and species that are closely related to humans but I'm also interested in the topic generally. I've not seen any specific studies in sentience on apes, just a whole lot on language and other aspects of cognition. I've seen scientific discussions on the question of awareness of life and death - mostly related to archaeological evidence for deliberate burial and ritual disposal of the dead in early human species.... and chimpanzees and bonobos grieve for dead loved ones (some real tearjerker clips on you tube of mother chimpanzees and bonobos parting with dead infants :cry: ) and recognise each other as individuals (I think most higher primates recognise each other as individuals).... but nothing specific on sentience that I can recall (maybe it was covered at uni and I forgot about it..)

    anyway I'm genuinely curious about this (I know stuff gets misconstrued on the internet and usually people ask for research papers to make someone prove a point when debating, but I'm really just very curious and not trying to argue at all)

    LOL, I'm a few years out of my graduate studies as well and this isn't my specific field, not to mention I don't have direct access to the journals the way I did when I was still at UCLA but here's what I've been able to dig up over my lunch break:

    This one seems especially apropos to the discussion of the use of domesticated animals but I can't claim to be familiar with the journal it is published in:
    http://www.appliedanimalbehaviour.com/article/S0168-1591(09)00039-2/abstract?cc=y=?cc=y=

    The abstract on this one cracks me up, wish I still got this journal. We can't even agree on what constitutes "behavior" so trying to establish a working definition for sentience is problematic to say the least. I tend to stick with the mirror test but....

    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003347209001730
    Behavioural biologists do not agree on what constitutes behaviour
    Animal Behaviour, Volume 78, Issue 1, July 2009, Pages 103-110

    And crap, this one came out since I left school, Nooooooo!

    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003347209003571
    Pigs learn what a mirror image represents and use it to obtain information
    Animal Behaviour, Volume 78, Issue 5, November 2009, Pages 1037-1041

    I can't get full text on these from here, but if you know how clue me in because I want to read them myself, but Animal Behavior is one of the leading journals for this field so they should be good.

    thanks :) that's really interesting :)

    I don't know how to get the full text either... I'm forever looking at abstracts.... it depends on the journal, some make the full text available after a certain amount of time has passed. but for the newer studies, I don't think you can without a subscription or being in a computer suite of a university that has a subscription for student access to the journals

    Gah! I was hoping you would know how. My recall (keeping in mind that I'm now pulling strait from my butt with no sources to back this up...) is that the most standard test for establishing sentience is the animal's ability to recognize itself and it's surroundings in a mirror. Based on what I can remember, this ability has been established in most of the great apes, dolphins (probably most toothed whales although I don't know how you'd test sperm whales), elephants, I believe some species of octopus, and it looks like possibly now pigs (but but but bacon :sad: :sad:).
  • sc003ro
    sc003ro Posts: 227 Member
    I am a hunter myself, but I eat everything (yes, EVERYTHING!! - since I don't eat coyote or bobcat, I don't hunt them) I kill when I hunt. Also, I sometimes kill animals for protection (usually insects) or accidentally while driving. I do not hunt rare, endangered, threatened, etc. animals (I'm not saying she is, but it doesn't explain what sub-species of elephant she is hunting so we don't really know).

    With that said, I don't support what this girl is doing. She is going out dressed up and with make-up (did you not see her pics?) with a camera crew, and killing animals for the fun of it. Some will argue that she is feeding people. Some will say that she is contributing to research. The fact that she brought a camera crews proves her real motivation: she wants attention and popularity. I do not believe for a second that, if she were to have to go out in the real wilderness (not a game preserve with all the animals fenced into the area), without a gun or bow, she could survive very long. She is not a true outdoorswoman who wants to be a part of nature; she is a wealthy Texan with a bloodlust too big even for Texas.

    she is a professional hunter....that is what they do....bring TV cameras for the show, articles etc
  • sc003ro
    sc003ro Posts: 227 Member
    I do have a problem with hunting endangered animals. Or damaging sensitive habitats through encroachment, overexploitation, etc. Those could prove to be useful in many ways, irrespective of your ethical stance.

    I have no problem with hunting in general. Or fishing. Or farming. I eat meat, I eat vegetables. I consider human an omnivore. I do think there is a case for rational use of resources, so I don't support much factory farming (I eat little meat, mostly free-range except for some chickens). Just on account of environmental damage. I also try to eat fish from sustainable sources.

    Hunting is not a sport, though. Neither is farming. Neither is darts or snooker (even if ESPN shows it). There is no real "contest" or competition in hunting (or bullfighting) and we all know who the loser will be, barring catastrophic accident. Yes, it might be exciting and exhilarating. So is crossing the highway.

    hunting is not a sport ...it is a way of life
  • salembambi
    salembambi Posts: 5,585 Member
    I love the people saying hunting is disgusting but I bet they have no issue chowing down a burger from a cow that was killed in a slaughter house in a much less humane way.....makes zero sense

    I have not eaten an animal in 13 years
  • The_Aly_Wei
    The_Aly_Wei Posts: 844 Member
    can you link me to all the studies on this? I'm really interested in this topic, usually in relation to humans, human ancestors and species that are closely related to humans but I'm also interested in the topic generally. I've not seen any specific studies in sentience on apes, just a whole lot on language and other aspects of cognition. I've seen scientific discussions on the question of awareness of life and death - mostly related to archaeological evidence for deliberate burial and ritual disposal of the dead in early human species.... and chimpanzees and bonobos grieve for dead loved ones (some real tearjerker clips on you tube of mother chimpanzees and bonobos parting with dead infants :cry: ) and recognise each other as individuals (I think most higher primates recognise each other as individuals).... but nothing specific on sentience that I can recall (maybe it was covered at uni and I forgot about it..)

    anyway I'm genuinely curious about this (I know stuff gets misconstrued on the internet and usually people ask for research papers to make someone prove a point when debating, but I'm really just very curious and not trying to argue at all)

    LOL, I'm a few years out of my graduate studies as well and this isn't my specific field, not to mention I don't have direct access to the journals the way I did when I was still at UCLA but here's what I've been able to dig up over my lunch break:

    This one seems especially apropos to the discussion of the use of domesticated animals but I can't claim to be familiar with the journal it is published in:
    http://www.appliedanimalbehaviour.com/article/S0168-1591(09)00039-2/abstract?cc=y=?cc=y=

    The abstract on this one cracks me up, wish I still got this journal. We can't even agree on what constitutes "behavior" so trying to establish a working definition for sentience is problematic to say the least. I tend to stick with the mirror test but....

    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003347209001730
    Behavioural biologists do not agree on what constitutes behaviour
    Animal Behaviour, Volume 78, Issue 1, July 2009, Pages 103-110

    And crap, this one came out since I left school, Nooooooo!

    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003347209003571
    Pigs learn what a mirror image represents and use it to obtain information
    Animal Behaviour, Volume 78, Issue 5, November 2009, Pages 1037-1041

    I can't get full text on these from here, but if you know how clue me in because I want to read them myself, but Animal Behavior is one of the leading journals for this field so they should be good.

    thanks :) that's really interesting :)

    I don't know how to get the full text either... I'm forever looking at abstracts.... it depends on the journal, some make the full text available after a certain amount of time has passed. but for the newer studies, I don't think you can without a subscription or being in a computer suite of a university that has a subscription for student access to the journals

    Gah! I was hoping you would know how. My recall (keeping in mind that I'm now pulling strait from my butt with no sources to back this up...) is that the most standard test for establishing sentience is the animal's ability to recognize itself and it's surroundings in a mirror. Based on what I can remember, this ability has been established in most of the great apes, dolphins (probably most toothed whales although I don't know how you'd test sperm whales), elephants, I believe some species of octopus, and it looks like possibly now pigs (but but but bacon :sad: :sad:).

    ^^^Correct (at least from what I have been reading as well.)

    Stand your bacon ground now! We had a high five about this!
  • 05suu
    05suu Posts: 90 Member
    South Africa particularly has lots of 'reserves'''.IE afew hectares of land where they house lions, elephants etc etc....Lions are bred there, and volunteers pay large amounts of money to go and help 'conservation'...they hand feed the lion cubs who are taken away from their mothers at afew days old..so that the mothers will breed some more..Just like the dog breeding centres...
    When the lions are too big for petting, they are sold off to 'canned hunting' reserves..
    This again is a reserve of afew hectares..and is fenced so the animals can't escape...
    It is in these places that many of these big brave HUNTERS go to get there 'trophies''''
    Is it sport??? Is it hell !!!!
    The animals are used to human contact so are not afraid of humans at all..In addition some are drugged to make it an easier shot....
    Anyone who has been to the Serengetti in Tanzania will have seen prides of lions lying under trees not in the least bit afraid of humans because there have been millions through there every year...When I was there a couple of cheetahs moved amongst the 12 jeeps that had lined up to see them..lions pass in front afew feet from you..It is absolutely bloody fantastic to see them...but how anyone shoot them is beyond my comprehension.
    The Kendall girl is trying to make a name for herself on American TV....and had a camera crew following her when she shot those animals..
    Sport? Hunting? Don't make me laugh....
    Like shooting ducks in a barrell.....
    Cruel and unusual punishment for these animals...Sentent beings that have families, hearts and emotions just like humans....
    and don't let them kid you that the villagers benefit from anything...the major bulk of money goes to the safari organiser which generally isn't even African...
    Sick people do sick things..and these are the worst!
  • GoldspursX3
    GoldspursX3 Posts: 516 Member
    I have hunted my enitre life. Growing up in rural East Texas in a poor family we used wild game killed on our land to supplement our diet. I no longer need to hunt to eat but still enjoy being directly connected to my food source. I butcher and process every animal I kill myself. I have no ethical dilemma of eating meat so the vegans indignation at me doing what comes natural to most humans is beyond me.
  • neandermagnon
    neandermagnon Posts: 7,436 Member
    can you link me to all the studies on this? I'm really interested in this topic, usually in relation to humans, human ancestors and species that are closely related to humans but I'm also interested in the topic generally. I've not seen any specific studies in sentience on apes, just a whole lot on language and other aspects of cognition. I've seen scientific discussions on the question of awareness of life and death - mostly related to archaeological evidence for deliberate burial and ritual disposal of the dead in early human species.... and chimpanzees and bonobos grieve for dead loved ones (some real tearjerker clips on you tube of mother chimpanzees and bonobos parting with dead infants :cry: ) and recognise each other as individuals (I think most higher primates recognise each other as individuals).... but nothing specific on sentience that I can recall (maybe it was covered at uni and I forgot about it..)

    anyway I'm genuinely curious about this (I know stuff gets misconstrued on the internet and usually people ask for research papers to make someone prove a point when debating, but I'm really just very curious and not trying to argue at all)

    LOL, I'm a few years out of my graduate studies as well and this isn't my specific field, not to mention I don't have direct access to the journals the way I did when I was still at UCLA but here's what I've been able to dig up over my lunch break:

    This one seems especially apropos to the discussion of the use of domesticated animals but I can't claim to be familiar with the journal it is published in:
    http://www.appliedanimalbehaviour.com/article/S0168-1591(09)00039-2/abstract?cc=y=?cc=y=

    The abstract on this one cracks me up, wish I still got this journal. We can't even agree on what constitutes "behavior" so trying to establish a working definition for sentience is problematic to say the least. I tend to stick with the mirror test but....

    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003347209001730
    Behavioural biologists do not agree on what constitutes behaviour
    Animal Behaviour, Volume 78, Issue 1, July 2009, Pages 103-110

    And crap, this one came out since I left school, Nooooooo!

    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003347209003571
    Pigs learn what a mirror image represents and use it to obtain information
    Animal Behaviour, Volume 78, Issue 5, November 2009, Pages 1037-1041

    I can't get full text on these from here, but if you know how clue me in because I want to read them myself, but Animal Behavior is one of the leading journals for this field so they should be good.

    thanks :) that's really interesting :)

    I don't know how to get the full text either... I'm forever looking at abstracts.... it depends on the journal, some make the full text available after a certain amount of time has passed. but for the newer studies, I don't think you can without a subscription or being in a computer suite of a university that has a subscription for student access to the journals

    Gah! I was hoping you would know how. My recall (keeping in mind that I'm now pulling strait from my butt with no sources to back this up...) is that the most standard test for establishing sentience is the animal's ability to recognize itself and it's surroundings in a mirror. Based on what I can remember, this ability has been established in most of the great apes, dolphins (probably most toothed whales although I don't know how you'd test sperm whales), elephants, I believe some species of octopus, and it looks like possibly now pigs (but but but bacon :sad: :sad:).

    I found this on wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirror_test

    theory of mind is an interesting one that I remember studying at university, i.e. understanding that other individuals don't know the same things you know - the evidence for this comes from animals exploiting this knowledge to deceive others. Baboons have a theory of mind, and are deceitful... e.g. hiding food from other baboons, mating in secret - this is done in ways that show that they understand that another animal doesn't see the same view of the world as they do, e.g. subordinate males hiding behind things to mate with females (the alpha doesn't let them do this, so they do it where the alpha can't see them)... stuff like that. There's less on that in non-humans on wikipedia, but there is a little: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_of_mind
  • 05suu
    05suu Posts: 90 Member
    .............and by the way..lions will most certainly be on the endangered species list by the end of 2014...due to these clowns who want a head on a wall...
    There are now about 8000 CAPTIVE lions in South Africa.....and very few wild.....
    This has got to change or your children won't know what a lion is except in a story book!
This discussion has been closed.