Skip to main content

Full text of "Game and wild-fur production and utilization on agricultural land"

See other formats


Historic, archived document 


Do notassume content reflects current 
scientific knowledge, policies, or practices. 


; 
yc Circular No. 636 


! ° 
; 


Game and Wild-Fur Production 
and Utilization 
on 


Agricultural Land—————-- 


Rm AIR 


as 


FR HCE acl) AV A soe BD 


US. papeceeen| of a 
J. PAUL MILLER, Fish and Willlife.Se . 
United States Department of the Tacuiee 
and 
BURWELL B. POWELL, Bureau of Agricultural Economics 
United States Department of Agriculture 


QPEL OGLE RAGGA OEE ALAG IEA RG OG TOG EAG IO LAGE LERI ALRITE EAGER LIER LE LONGI IE ID TER RII RINE IEE ISTH ENB) 
For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, Washington, D. C., Price 10 cents 


UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 
WASHINGTON, D. C., JANUARY 1942 


Circular No. 636 
Januaty 1942 + Washington, D. C. 


UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


Game and Wild-Fur Production and Urtili- 
zation on Agricultural Land 


By J. PAUL MILLER, Fish and Wildlife Service, United States Department of the In- 
terior and BURWELL B. POWELL, Bureau of Agricultural Economics, 
United States Department of Agriculture 


Page Page 
ORC WORG eee see ea 1 | Game and wild-fur production and use—Con. 
MmtrOGuU chon awn ee ee ee 2 Problems in production___._____________- 39 
Past and present status of game and wild fur__ 3 Problems jMUse se 2. aoe Se ee 41 
AN SWUNG BING?) ee ea ee 3 | Farm-game management programs__________- 45 
eet BES Ae sso sh ee eee ‘ IPUPPOSCS# mee mace ween uu N Ee Se 45 
OCU Chil O MM eaeerepleaste eae Sag Te PIANOS la ey eda oe RA UNE SS aS A5 
IslayAV@S Maly so oe ee ee ee 10 Br oaalenice and distribution! {2072 51 
Social and econorait importance-_-__-____-- 10 STG COS GE ee manic Ai trah Nar une OU See laa 51 
Value of game and wild fur______________-___- 11 
Origin and shifts in game and wild-fur at eae eee MENENG sate 2 oc a See ceo Be 
alts DN Gametarms 8 6 Se a ag 
Value of wildlife to the individual user___ 12 Encouraging game and wild-fur production 
Value of wildlife to the State________-___- 14 at TPA ORIORIAGTI 
F gricultural lands_______- 53 
Value of game and wild fur to the farmer__ 14 Attitudes of interested parties 53 
Comparative value of game and wild-fur Th 5 Ean Ge” an uu rr 
products and of agricultural products... 16 2 e pro oa ee poe ees 54 
Game and wild-fur production and use on ecommendations._-______-_--.--._------ 54 
meniculturallandse swe e a aS a oe 18 | General conclusions and recommendations_._... 55 
Importance of agricultural lands________-_- DIRSR Uf i Wa a oa cae ae i Nn NI eae a 56 


PAPA PRARARRARAAB 


FOREWORD 


The aggregate of wildlife on agricultural lands of the United 
States is large and its estimated value is very impressive. Hence 
enthusiasts have suggested that returns from wildlife management 
may be an important source of revenue to farmers. Locally, worth- 
while revenue may be obtained, but the country is vast, and the values, 
however large, when spread over the whole, become very thin. 
Hunters are so numerous that the game harvest of a State distributed 
among them could supply each with only a fraction of a single 
specimen of some of the species most sought. If the return to the 
hunter is small, then that to the farmer cannot be great. Again 
high-class agricultural land can hardly be devoted to such a distinctly 
low-income crop as wildlife. Only inferior lands can be used and 
their productivity of wildlife as of other crops is low. 

These obvious considerations have been ignored and many mislead- 
ing statements have been made as to the revenue-yielding potentialities 

323408°—42—_1 1 


2 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


of farm wildlife. It is fortunate, therefore, that the results of a 
thorough study of the subject are now available. This report on an 
investigation, of Nation-wide scope, field work of which was carried 


on in 1936 and 19387, has been eagerly awaited. The authors show that © 


more than 85 percent of the huntable land is in private ownership or 
control and that economic necessity for its most efficient use reduces 
wildlife production to an incidental, if not accidental, status. 

Demand being greater than ever before, this situation is a matter 
of concern for hunters and game officials. They have made attempts 
to encourage the increase of wildlife upon farms but have not suc- 
ceeded in developing any plan satisfactory enough to gain wide 
acceptance. 

What the farmers desire more than financial return is freedom from 
trespass annoyances, safety for themselves and their possessions, and 
control of hunting upon their lands. The realities of farm wildlife 
problems are for the first time adequately presented in this publica- 
tion, which should go far toward insuring more rational handling of 
the wild-animal resources of our agricultural lands. 


W. L. McATER, 
Technical Adviser, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 


INTRODUCTION 


The principal objectives of the study upon which this circular is 
based were to (1) ascertain how much income a farmer or rancher can 
expect to realize from wildlife or from game management, (2) get a 
comprehensive picture of the measures each State is using to provide 
a supply of wildhfe, (3) discover or formulate biologically and eco- 
nomically sound principles which will serve as a basis for wildlife 
conservation programs acceptable to farmers and wildlife conserva- 
tionists, and (4) ascertain the feasibility and practicability of a fuller 
use of farm and range lands in the production, utilization, and per- 
petuation of wildlife coincident with the improvement of agricultural 
conditions. 

The project agreement and outline were approved in March 1936 and 
field work was started in June. The first year was devoted to a recon- 
naissance survey of the United States, designed to evaluate the prob- 
lems involved in making wildlife a supplementary farm enterprise 
and to select representative areas for detailed study. Conferences were 
held in each State with representatives of the agricultural colleges, 
agricultural experiment stations, universities, game departments, 
planning boards, and other interested State and Federal agencies, 
farmers’ organizations, sportsmen’s organizations, and individuals 
interested in the problems of land use, farm management, and conser- 
vation of wildlife. All phases of agriculture and of wildlife conser- 
vation and utilization were represented in these conferences. 

Studies were made during the next year of areas where attempts had 
been made, or were being made, to establish farmer-sportsman coopera- 
tion in game management on farms. The purpose was to learn some 
of the causes of success and of failure of game-management projects, 
the effect game management and controlled hunting have upon the 
supply of game and hunting opportunities and upon the organization, 
management, income, and expense of the farms. 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 3 
PAST AND PRESENT STATUS OF GAME AND WILD FUR 
ABUNDANCE 


Wildlife abundance has always been gaged in relative terms, for 
no standardized methods have been devised for the enumeration of 
most species. Such terms as “rare,” “common,” and “abundant” are 
in general use. So a species designated as abundant by different indi- 
viduals or as abundant in different territories may be much more 
numerous in a unit area in one district than in another. To establish 
a basis on which to indicate the different position occupied by wildlife 
in our present economic and social system as compared with periods in 
our earlier history, a few well-known recent examples are given. 


IN RELATION TO LAND AREA : 


Many species that once abounded are now extinct or endangered, 
and many that once ranged widely are now found only in limited areas. 
Sixty million American buffalo once ranged over more than a million 
square miles, but a rapid depletion of the herds followed the building 
of a transcontinental railroad and the settlement of the land. In 1941 
the estimated number was less than 35,000, of which approximately 
30,000 were on Canadian ranges and some 5,000 in the local zoos, 
national parks, and refuges in the United States. 

The heath hen once ranged along the Atlantic seaboard from south- 
ern New England to Virginia. Records indicate that these birds were 
originally relatively abundant, yet by 1830 they were rare and in 
danger of extinction. A few remained on the islands off the coast of 
Massachusetts; in 1916 it was estimated that there were between 800 
and 2,000 birds on Martha’s Vineyard under protection. Catastrophe 
struck in many ways and the heath hen became extinct in 1982. These 
are only two of many species once numerous and widely distributed 
that have suffered reduction in numbers and range, or even extinction, 
by the advance of civilization. 

Many species of North American mammals have been reduced in 
number and only a few have increased. Birds may be nearer former 
numbers, although several species have disappeared or are endangered. 
Others, especially some exotic species such as the starling, English 
sparrow, ring-necked pheasant, and Hungarian partridge, have 
increased. 

Kcological changes brought about by man have caused an increase in 
populations of some native forms, both birds and mammals. The bob- 
white increased and greatly intensified its range during the pioneer 
days when clearing and plowing the land and the introduction of new 
plants provided an abundant supply of food and cover, thus making a 
more favorable habitat. Probably there are more bobwhites today 
than before the advent of the white man. 

Deer have greatly increased in parts of their former ranges. After 
the forests were cut, luxuriant new growth created a habitat of much 
greater deer-carrying capacity than the virgin woodlands had _pro- 
vided. Even areas near the populous Atlantic coast are believed to 
have more white-tailed deer today than ever before. Ecological 
changes brought about by the settlement of the country have resulted 
in larger wildlife populations in some areas and smaller in others. 


4 CIRCULAR 6386, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


When all the increases and decreases in the number of individuals of 

various species of wildlife are considered, the aggregate number of 
game and wild-fur animals in relation to unite of land is believed to be 
smaller than in the past. 


| 
1 
} 


IN RELATION TO HUMAN DEMANDS 


The limitation of the supply of game and wild fur in proportion to 
the increased demand is much more evident than is the decrease in the 
aggregate number. This demand is determined by the economic and 
social development of the people and the density of the human 
population. 

According to sociologists and economists, people exist in a hunting 
and fishing stage of civilization until the game resources fail to meet 
their needs. They then usually develop an agricultural society. Rec- 
ords of early explorers indicate that when the Iroquois Indians were 
discovered by the white men in 1608, there were probably fewer than 
20,000 in an area that included the greater part of the present States 
of New York, Pennsylvania, and Ohio, and parts of Canada bordering 
Lake Ontario. Even these few people apparently needed more wild- 
hfe for sustenance than the supply provided, for they were then in an 
agricultural stage of civilization. This culture was well advanced 
among the Iroquois Indians, as pointed out by Yoder.* 

It is reasonable to assume that before the white men came the Indians 
used game and wild fur mainly to provide the necessities of life. Their 
demand was relatively constant and in direct proportion to the density 
of population. The white men increased the drain on these resources, 
for the settlers, when possible, also relied upon this supply for food and 
clothing. Among the first evidences of this increased demand was 
contravention of former laws and customs. According to Seton,? it 
appears “that in 1684, De la Barre, Governor of Canada, complained 
that the Iroquois were encroaching on the country of Indians who were 
allies of the French. He got a stinging reply from Garangula, the 
Onondaga Chief, and a general statement that the aborigines had game 
laws; not written, indeed, but well known, and enforced with a club if 
need be: ‘We knock the Twightwies (Miamis) and the Chictaghicks 
(Illinois) on the head, because they had cut down the trees of peace, 
which were the limits of our country. They have hunted Beaver on 
our lands. They have acted contrary to the customs of all Indians, for 
they left none of the Beavers alive; they killed both male and female.’ ” 

The human population of the area outlined increased rapidly be- 
tween 1680 and 1760. As the game supply of Pennsylvania was becom- 
ing depleted, the legislators of that colony regulated the take by white 
residents in an effort to protect the food supply of the Indians. Such 
steps marked the end of the period when wildlife was essential to life. 

The demand for game and fur would probably have decreased as the 
development of agriculture and industry advanced, if the uses for 
game and fur had remained the same, but both whites and natives be- 

gan to look for commodities to use in exchange. Furs, hides, antlers, 
plumage, and other wildlife products used as “luxuries, found a ready 


1 YODER, F. R. INTRODUCTION TO AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS. New York, Thomas Y. 
Crowell, 1929, pp. 3-4. 
= * SETON. E. T. LIVES OF GAME ANIMALS. New York, Doubleday, Doran, 1929, vol. 4, 
t. 2, p. 499. 


OO EE EE 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 5 


market in Europe. They were a lucrative cash crop. These new uses 
made greater demands on wildlife than had the food and clothing 
needs of Indians and settlers. 

By 1900, when the population of the United States approximated 
76 millions, the supply of game available for sustenance was practi- 
cally exhausted. Nevertheless, there was still a heavy demand for 
both essential and nonessential uses. Efforts were made to protect 
these resources by enactment of many laws restricting the season, take, 
and use to which game could be put. But the demand for nonsuste- 
nance uses grew. Occupations, through the attitudes they create in 
people, influence the use to which game and wild fur is put. Wild birds 
and mammals were commonplace to the Indians and hunting was a 
major occupation, but today it is an esthetic or recreational avocation. 
Relaxation and recreation are essential to the physical well-being oi 
people who live under mental strain in this machine age, and many of 
them choose some use of wildlife as a means of relaxation. They spend 
considerable time, effort, and money to preserve and perpetuate the 
opportunities for such enjoyment. 

Demand for game is influenced also by its accessibility which in turn 
is affected by the social and economic development of the people. The 
Indians followed the trails on foot or worked the waterways in canoes; 
they had to carry the kill on their backs at least as far as their boats. 
Many places were so inaccessible or seldom visited that little demand 
was placed on wildlife there. Under improved transportation facili- 
ties, the take of game is probably more evenly distributed throughout 
the country than in the past. This accessibility makes wildlife avail- 
able to more people and assures more complete utilization but it also 
reduces the number of undisturbed wildlife breeding areas. 

Statistical methods cannot be used in comparing hunting pressure 
today and in the past, for there are no comparable records. Licensees 
are now permitted to hunt only a relatively few days each year, 
whereas hunting was once almost a year-round occupation. There 
appears to be no logical way of comparing the past and the present 
with respect to kill. No one knows how much game the average Indian 
took in a year, nor are there reliable figures on game kill by the aver- 
age modern hunter. 

The present demand for wildlife for hunting and trapping may be 
suggested graphically by statistics on the sale of licenses. However, 
these show only the number of applicants for the privilege of taking 
game and fur, and do not indicate the take. Moreover, there is wide 
variation in license requirements among the States: Some Common- 
wealths grant free hunting privileges to veterans, youths, the aged, 
and other groups; most States do not require a landowner to have a 
license to hunt or trap on his own property; some permit the resi- 
dents of a county to hunt anywhere within that county without a 
license and some do not require a license to hunt certain species. 

Then in some places requirements are rigidly enforced whereas in 
others they may be overlooked. Fees vary widely. There is no 
record of many persons who hunt and trap. Some States issue only 
combination licenses that permit the holder to hunt, fish, and trap, 
although the holder may do only one or two; other States require 
separate licenses for each purpose. Even with all these limitations the 
sale of licenses appears to be the best available statistical measure of 
human demand on game and fur. 


CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


ted pros sosueory surddeva}y pues 


(4equnu) sesuadi] 
° a © 


= 


€l 


bl 


Sl 


W-r6es-a 


S2401S Payluy 
21DM0j3Q 


puojks0W 


DUIJOJOD YON 


DUI]}OIDD YNOS 


pwoqgdly 


IddISsiISSiW 


bed SOXOL 


Le SOSUDYJY 


Ce) pwoyp}40 


surjuny Jo 


‘uorepndod QO0'T 


Joquinu oy) YIM powedutoo 


L) oo1xaW MON 


L) ouozuy 


Lyon 


Ln! Opds0j09 


} DPDAON 


LJ bulwokm 
Le) pupjuoW 


| Lame SOSUD} 


O9jIY BIQOJUNH [O1jUaJOg 40 9] A4ONbS YooO JO PjOS sosuad!7 jo saquiNN 


uoreyndod Jo 


L_| OJOX0G UjJON 
I 


Ld DjOXDG YyNOS 
Le) 1JNOSSIW 


| Dy¥sbgaN 


| 
[SS ee 
| 


DJOS@UUIW 


ae SS Aa 


1 
| 


ea — 


SNSUBD OCEI 04 Bulpsodzy ajIW OONbS 494 UOIOINdog jo Ayjsuag = 


eee upB1yo1q 


Sa eS Si 


Ayisuep ofgj—L Foy 


no1j9auU0D 


fe eT OIA 


z 
® 
= 
x 
5 
as 
5s 3 
o ® 
ie) 
oe 
09 
— 06 
- —|o21 
osi 
——o8! 


=mmeeret OG 


=. Ove 


012 


——oo¢ 


Ayisuap uoipojndog 


——0ee 


- o9ge 


—_—06¢ 


OZ 


—osr 


O8t 


oOIS 


——— 0s 


SE SS A 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 1 


Under present conditions, the sale of hunting and trapping privi- 
leges tends to vary inversely to the density of human populations 
(fig. 1). The number of licenses shown to each thousand inhabitants 
decreases as the density of human population increases. This seem- 
ingly paradoxical situation might be explained if the density of 
population beyond a point inhibits and restricts the sporting use of 
wildhite; or if the supply of game becomes so limited and the sport 
of hunting becomes so inferior that the sporting demand eventually 
drops. Perhaps the number of other available pastimes that multiply 
with the increased population density influences the proportionate 
demand. Or if the density of population corresponds closely with 
the occupations of the people, this may reflect the type of recreational 
pastimes in which they engage. 

Another way of estimating the hunting pressure in comparison 
with human populations is indicated in figure 2. This chart indi- 
cates that hunting pressure tends to be proportionate to the density 
of population. States having comparable population densities some- 
times differ in hunting pressure and they usually differ widely in the 
occupations of the people. 

Degree of demand for wildlife is often influenced by social dictates. 
A species may be used in one part of the country but ignored in 
another, for varied reasons. Some game animals are looked upon as 
having superior sporting qualities, whereas others are considered to 
lack essential elements. Requirements of raw furs are determined 
to a great extent by fashion. : 

After an evaluation of all available factors relative to demands for 
game and wild fur it is reasonable to conclude that there is a greater 
demand for game and wild fur today than in the past, and that 
whether judged on the basis of unit areas or of human demand, game 
and wild fur appear to be less abundant than formerly. 


HapsirTatT 


The type of landownership, public or private, determines to a con- 
siderable degree both the use and the intensity of the use to which 
land is put. This influences the type and condition of existing wild- 
fife habitat. 

Under the form of government prevalent among the Indians, all 
the land was tribal property and little use was made of it except for 
wildlife. Whenever habitat conditions permitted, game was _ pro- 
duced. to the maximum carrying capacity of the land, the only lmi- 
tations being those intrinsic in nature—and the Indians. Since the 
principal use of the land was the production of wild animals, and 
the pursuit of game interfered with no individual right nor with 
any other desired use of the land, it is assumed that all members of 
a tribe had free access to the game on tribal lands. : 

White men brought the system of private ownership and intensive 
use of the land, which progressed with settlement. Lands passed 
from public to private ownership by grant, homestead, sale, and 
other means, until today the Federal, State, and municipal Govern- 
ments own or control not more than 30 percent of the total land area 
of the United States. Much of this is devoted to uses that inhibit 
or prevent the production of wildlife, and, on much of it, hunting 
cannot be permitted. 


CIRCULAR 636, U. 8S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


DIUIOJI|DD 
uobai9 


uoyburysom 


O01IXaW MON 


= oO 
(4aqunu) sasuaciq 1 = 
Ono (ye) n» & 
Br pS PB e Se iO HLA Se POU GTN IO. RUE Bont een Sis SG mene mane, a5 
SS ee o ao 
S8}0}S payiun ! ™ 
Aes . 
. Lee] 210M 19Q e 
puo|As0W om 
re) ; 
0 DIUIBIIA 4SOM I } 
2 oS | 
8 DIUIBa1A R | 
€ DUI}OJDD YyJON D 
5 7) 
2 DUI|010 Yyynos = 
co) 01610a9 (5) : 
2 _ ; 
2 ppiz0}4 ay 
= on ; 
S owoqoly = 
2 _ | 
We iddississiw | 
oa 
= aesseuual { 
a2 ’ 
[~] 
= Ayonjuey 
re) Duoisin 
roy 181N0> 
= SDSUDIY I 
S | 
© DWOYD|XO 
. 
2 
o soxoL 
oe 
7 
c 
o 
& 
= 
= 
So 
3 
a 
[= 
Ss 
z 


Density of Population Per Square Mile According to 1930 Census 


ouozuy 


Opds0joo 


Pe 
=] 


number of hunting and trapp 


yon 


OpDAeN 


Buiwokm 


oupp! 


DUDJUOW 
SDSUDy 


D¥SDIGaN 


D}040G YINOS 


DjOH0G UIJON 


mile of potentially huntable area. 


UNOSSIW 


DMO| 


DJOSaUUIN 


UISUODSIMA 


up61y91WN 


sioulli] 


DuDIpU] 


o140 


Aasial MON 


DiuDA|ASuUag 


yO, MON 


ynd2aUUOD 


S——I 
——— 
bem! PUDIS] @POYY 
—————I 


| | en) S|} 2SNYIDSSD 


ee ee eee) LU 0A 


saan ene D/L ROWUDHIAGN 


TSS SS ee 
Si wlP UG Boye gad. se peewee 
N N - - 


$isuap UoIpOjNdog 


270 


er hea 
0 v v Mm Mm m m 
A 


FieureE 2.—The density of population compared with the 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 9 


Cities, parks, railroad and highway rights-of-way, reservoirs, 
and other special-use areas are restricted in the part they can play 
in wildlife production. In addition, large tracts of Federal and 
State lands are leased to private individuals for uses that often 
conflict with wildlife production or use. Many species of game 
and wild-fur animals must rely to a large extent upon agriculture 
to provide suitable habitat. Public lands even though used for 
agriculture are less likely to provide a cultivated habitat. The 
uses made of this wildlife depend largely upon the wishes of pri- 
vate landowners. The changes to private ownership of land, and 
consequently of wildlife habitat, have been so pronounced that today 
72 percent of the potentially huntable land of the United States is 
privately owned and an additional 15 percent in public ownership 
is leased for private use. On these lands, habitat conditions are 
determined primarily by land use, the major objective of which 
is entirely independent of wildlife production. In fact, much of 
the privately owned land is so intensively used that game habitat 
is often destroyed. On this land, wild birds and mammals can seldom 
be the first consideration; their occurrence is generally incidental, 
if not accidental, to other land use. 

It is logical to assume, therefore, that present habitat conditions 
for wildlife are in general inferior to former conditions, although 
certain exceptions to this generalization are well known. 


PRODUCTION 


Since game and fur animals were essential to the existence of 
the Indians, their production was not allowed to become entirely 
a matter of change. The laws of certain tribes were designed to 
protect and perpetuate certain species. The agricultural Indians 
took only what they needed and limited the take to the adults and 
frequently to the male of a species. This was a form of wildlife 
management. The manipulation of cover, such as the burning of 
forest and prairie to influence ecological succession, was practiced 
by such means as the Indians had at their disposal. 

Many present laws and regulations are designed to control the 
take of wildlife for the purpose of assuring the maintenance of 
breeding stock and the perpetuation of species. Many game farms 
and fur farms are operated by governmental departments and _ indi- 
viduals throughout the country to supply public needs. Fur farms 
do not directly affect the production of fur in the wild but they 
influence demand. Animals produced on fur farms are bred and 
reared in confinement. The animals have been carefully selected 
and bred until they are of superior quality and are generally too 
valuable to be used for hunting or trapping. There are some excep- 
tions, for raccoons, red foxes, and others are occasionally liberated 
for restocking and other purposes, but this has only a small influ- 
ence on the wild supply. 

The game farms devoted to game birds have not yet produced 
birds at a cost low enough to warrant their use for public shooting. 
The present cost of these birds, raised to maturity, is estimated to 
be between $1.50 and $2 each. As hunting licenses sell for $1 to 
$3 and permit the holder to kill six or more birds annually, it is 

323408°—42__2 


10 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


evident that the State cannot depend upon pen-reared stock to meet 
the demand for shooting. But pen-reared birds are now quite gen- 
erally used to restock depleted covers in the hope that their progeny 
will increase the supply of shootable game. The supply of upland 
game therefore depends largely upon natural production. Various 
procedures to increase production have been recommended in recent 
years, most of them as a part of game management. As these 
management plans progress and are correlated with other land-use 
practices, the farm production of game birds and animals may gradu- 
ally assume an incidental status where associated with agriculture. 

It seems safe to say that, at present, wildlife production on agri- 
cultural land is virtually accidental. Despite large expenditures, 
and the enactment and enforcement of laws in the interest of wild- 
life throughout the United States, the existence of game and wild 
fur is still dependent largely upon fortuitous circumstances. 


HARVESTING 


Methods used by the Indians in harvesting wildlife were primitive 
as compared with modern procedures. Snares, pits, logfalls, and the 
use of bows and arrows required real physical effort and skill. Hunt- 
ing and trapping were the principal occupations of most of the men 
and boys in many tribes. 

Modern mechanics of harvesting game and fur animals now require 
far less physical effort and skill. New weapons and traps, rapid trans- 
portation, well-bred and highly trained dogs, and new hunting and 
trapping techniques have made things easier. 

Formerly the harvesting of game was a means of livelihood; today 
it isasport. These changes would be disastrous to game if they were 
not partly compensated for by improved hunting ethics and legislative 
action. Even then with the larger number of persons participating, it 
is probable that the aggregate annual kill now exceeds that of former 
times. 

Public sentiment at present is generally opposed to the sale of wild 
game through commercial channels. Most States prohibit such dis- 
position of game birds or mammals, even though they are obtained 
legally during the open season. The laws are designed to prevent 
market hunting and to make the taking of game a form of recrea- 
tion. The harvesting of the wild-fur crop, however, is still a valued 
source of income for a considerable number of people. 


SocIAL AND Economic IMPORTANCE 


The social and economic importance of wildlife among any people 
depends upon the degree of social advancement that that group has 
attained. Sociologists consider that the five progressive stages of 
civilization are brought about by necessity and not by inclination. 
There are gradations between the classifications, and the boundaries 
are not sharply drawn. The first and most primitive condition is the 
collective stage; man in this phase of social advancement is little above 
the status of animal, for he subsists on what he can seize with his bare 
hands. 

The next step is to the hunting and fishing stage, so commonly exem- 
plified among primitive peoples; it is characterized by the possession 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION ll 


of tools, usually weapons that enable their owners to take possession 
of wild animals which otherwise would be unobtainable. Human 
beings in this stage often band together to hunt wild mammals and 
birds; thus wildlife assumes social significance. Game now becomes 
of major economic importance, for such people depend almost exclu- 
sively upon wildlife for food, clothing, shelter, and essential parts of 
tools and weapons. 

In the pastoral stage man has all the skills of the hunting and fishing 
stage out of which it developed and, in addition, the skills of taming or 
domesticating animals. To find food for their stock the people of a 
pastoral society are necessarily nomadic. They begin to appreciate 
somewhat the esthetic and recreational benefits from wildhfe. As 
these nomads own herds of domestic animals from which they obtain 
food, clothing, shelter, and profit, they are not so dependent on wildlife 
as the less socialized groups. 

The agricultural phase of civilization is characterized by the domesti- 
cation of plants and, provided tillage is advanced beyond merely the 
use of a hoe, presupposes the domestication of animals. People in a 
fully developed agricultural stage use wildlife primarily for esthetic 
and recreational purposes. But wildlife still has some economic value 
in providing food and clothing in substitution for marketable domestic 
commodities. : 

The agricultural-industrial is that stage of social development 
wherein a considerable proportion of the population is no longer 
directly dependent upon the soil for livelihood. Many urban residents 
are entirely alienated from the soil and rural associations. As wildlife 
offers an avenue of return to natural things, much time, effort, and 
money are expended in the perpetuation, care, and pursuit of it. Wild 
birds and mammals reach their peak of social importance in this stage. 
Marketable wildlife commodities are of little economic importance, 
however, compared with other products of soil or of industry, and the 
people are no longer dependent to any appreciable degree upon wild- 
life for subsistence. Therefore, it is evident that the recreational, 
esthetic, social, and cultural importance of wildlife to a people varies 
directly with, and the economic importance of wildlife varies inversely 
to, the development of the arts and sciences of a people. 


VALUE OF GAME AND WILD FUR 


The economic importance of game and wild fur is far less than it 
used to be, but their social importance is far greater. Their value 
depends upon and is determined by their capacity to gratify one or 
more human wants or desires and the cost of maintaining a supply. 
These commodities have several sources of value. For example, 
game has value as food and wild fur has value as raiment and adorn- 
ment. These are designated as tangible values. Game and wild fur 
along with many other forms of wildlife also have value as objects of 
esthetic and recreational enjoyment. These are designated as in- 
tangible values. A third and very important value of wildlife is the 
stimuli and foundation it provides for industries and commerce. This 
is an indirect value. 

In measuring direct as well as indirect values of game and wild 
fur and in discussing them, tangible values can be, and usually are 


2 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


measured and expressed in monetary terms, but intangible values are 
too elusive to be measured easily or expr essed in monetary terms. 
Indirect values usually include both tangible and intangible values, 
so are difficult of measurement. The value of the commodities and 
the volume of business of the industries and commerce stimulated 
by the commodities must also be differentiated. 


OrIGIN AND SHIFTS IN GAME AND WiLp-FurR VALUES 


Tangible value is apparently about the only value game and fur 
had to the Indians and the pioneer settlers. It was usually plentiful, 
nature provided the supply without cost, and getting it cost only 
the use of crude, often home-made, weapons and the energy to stalk 
and capture the bird or mammal. This was work to these people, but 
each person could take possession of all the game or fur he wanted. 
As it was plentiful and he used it only for food, clothing, or shelter, 
no monetary value was assigned to it. 

As the country was settled the use and value of game and wild fur 
shifted. First they were objects of sustenance of great value to the 
individual possessing them but of no monetary value in commerce. 
Next they became objects of commerce having great value. Lastly 
game has become an object of no commercial value but of increasingly 
great esthetic and recreational value with apparently limitless direct 
and indirect values. Wild fur remains an object of limited commercial 
value. The second phase in this shift together with the accompany- 
ing change in land use inevitably resulted in the present position of 
wildlife in our economic and social system. 

Wildlife values as well as the uses have changed vastly since the 
early years. Wildlife is relatively scarce. Maintenance of a supply 
costs enormous sums. And the equipment and travel necessary to 
hunt and fish are expensive to the individual. To get wild fur is 
still work but the supply is small and the take is limited to a very 
few species. Another modern but nonconsumptive use of wildlife is 
the casual pursuit of wildlife by those who enjoy photographing it 
and those who get esthetic and recreational enjoyment out of merely 
seeing and hearing wild creatures. This use seems to have great 
possibilities and is ‘rapidly increasing. 


VALUE OF WILDLIFE TO THE INDIVIDUAL USER 


Modern hunters place a high value on wildlife mainly because of 
the intangible value they receive from the sport and recreation it 
offers; they assign only a relatively small tangible value to game prod- 
ucts for food or “clothing. Data from hunter reports show an average 
meat value of $2 per hunter reporting in upland-game States and $14 
per hunter reporting in States having both big game and upland game, 
with waterfowl included in both cases. The value of the meat taken by 
big-game hunters ranges from nothing to $75 per hunter reporting. 

The intangible cost of wildlife to the modern hunter is the energy 
expended in pursuing game; the tangible costs are the license fees, 
taxes, and contributions to conservation or ganizations which help to 
maintain the game supply and the money spent for travel, supplies, 
equipment, services, and related items. 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 13 


The modern trapper, like the trapper of bygone days, values fur 
animals because he can sell their pelts for cash; getting them is work. 
The trapper’s intangible cost is the work of capturing the animal and 
preparing the pelts for sale; his tangible costs are much the same as 
the hunter’s. Data from trapper reports show that in Prairie States 
the average value of fur taken per trapper reporting is less than $1, 
but it ranges from $25 in States with fair fur-animal habitat to $120 
in the best muskrat-producing States. 

As the reporting hunters and trappers are known to have a higher 
average kill than the nonreporters in the same State, the values given 
here per hunter and per trapper are higher than the average for all 
hunters and trappers, so the indications are that the average value of 
meat and fur taken is very small. 


FIGuRE 3.—Cottontail rabbits, a typical farm-land species, are the most important 
and popular game animal in the United States; however, they can be very 
destructive in orchards. 


Users of wildlife who neither hunt nor trap place a high intangible 
value upon it because they enjoy photographing wild creatures, lis- 
tening to their calls, and watching their behavior (fig. 3). The costs 
to these users are about the same as the cost to the hunters except for 
the lack of the license fees. 

Thus the indirect value of game and wild fur to the individual 
apparently resides in the added business brought to the community and 
the contribution toward enlivening and enriching the environment. 
Hunters and tourists attracted to an area by wildlife create a demand 
for local products and services. The direct value of wildlife to the 
individual is found in the meat and fur taken, and in his own enjoy- 
ment of hunting. 


14 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


VALUE OF WILDLIFE TO THE STATE 


Indirect values of, wildlife to the State or other civil divisions are 
those resulting from the esthetic, recreational, and social facilities 
provided for the people and the business brought to local industries 
that pay taxes and employ people. Wildlfe also attracts certain 
industries and businesses, and occasionally serves to increase the resi- 
dent population of an area. By increasing the taxable property and 
business, wildlife often contributes an imgiieece but tangible income 
to the community, municipality, county, or larger governmental unit. 
The direct value of wild birds and mammals to the State is largely 
found in the receipts from the sale of hunting, trapping, and fishing 
licenses, and allied items. In areas where the wildlife industry and 
allied businesses are concentrated, the indirect receipts can, and some- 
times do, form a substantial share of the tax revenue. 

Wildlife also provides an indirect, intangible income to the State 
by attracting visitors and by enticing many of its own residents to 
spend their leisure in healthful outdoor recreation. 

In all probability the value of indirect receipts from wildlife 
greatly exceed the value of direct receipts, and intangible values 
exceed both the direct and indirect. It would appear that the value 
of wildlife to the State today les in the important and powerful 
stimuli for a large and active group of industries and in the incen- 
tives and means for esthetic, recreational, and social outdoor activities 
for the people. Wildlife value to the individual depends upon the use 
he makes of it, but, in all instances, it is primarily intangible in the 
form of esthetic and recreational enjoyment. 


VALUE OF GAME AND WILD Fur To THE FARMER 


DESTRUCTION OF INSECTS 


Perplexing problems are involved in discussing the values of game 
and wild fur to the farmers. For example, it is frequently pointed 
out that wild birds destroy many injurious insects. This is un- 
doubtedly true, but the species most generally mentioned are not 
game-bird species, although quail and pheasants do at times consume 
large quantities of insects. 

Not all insects are injurious. Probably more species are either 
beneficial or neutral than are harmful. All species are eaten by some 
birds and mammals. Just how much net money value can be placed 
on the destruction of insect pests is open to question. Certain lia- 
bilities must be charged against the other activities of these game 
birds. If they destroy more crops than they save, or if they eat as 
many beneficial as injurious insects, there may be no net benefit to 
the farmers. Results vary according to local circumstances. Ap- 
parently there are few records of game birds assisting materially in 
the control of insect outbreaks, and there is no evidence that game 
birds have made possible any substantial reduction in the use of con- 
trol measures. It is entirely possible that certain forms of insects 
themselves occupy a comparable or more important place in the con- 
trol of undesirable insects than do game birds. Probably no game 
mammal and only a limited number of fur-beari ing animals are recone 
nized as being insectivorous in their habits. 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 15 


DESTRUCTION OF WEEDS 


The subject of the destruction of weed seeds by game birds 1s contro- 
versial. One group maintains that this activity of the birds brings 
great benefits; another group says the birds are responsible for the 
wide dissemination of obnoxious plants and the destruction of culti- 
vated crops. Both sides have some evidence to support their conten- 
tions. Weeds always produce a greater supply of seeds than can 
possibly find room to grow, so farmers realize that game birds have 
little if any effect on the need of cultivation to control weed pests. 
But where game birds and mammals do perform a service to agriculture 
this value should not be overlooked. 


PROVIDING ESTHETIC ENJOYMENT 


Farmers continually say of game, “Oh, I like to see it around.” 
Farmers enjoy working among living things. The daily association 
with birds and mammals and the enlivenment and enrichment of rural - 
environment by these creatures are among the attractive features of 
farm life. The bevy of quail in the garden, the scurrying rabbit in 
the fence corner, the squirrel frisking in the wood lot, and the colorful 
pheasant in the hay meadow are usually appreciated by the farmer and 
his family. In fact, because of this appreciation the family frequently 
objects to hunting on their property or elsewhere. 


BUSINESS AND SOCIAL USES 


Game frequently furnishes a farmer a chance for business or social 
contacts. Probably far more could be done in this direction, although 
the farmer may not choose to accept money either for the wild crea- 
tures or for hunting privileges. Nevertheless, many farmers enjoy 
hunting and offer this entertainment to friends and business associates. 
In this way some farmers can, and often do, make the wildlife on their 
land a business and social asset of no mean proportion. This is but one 
of the reasons for a careful rationalization of wildlife and other farm 
enterprises. 

HOME USES 


Game was frequently an important item of living to the early settlers 
throughout the country, but now, except in certain areas where sub- 
marginal land is still farmed, game is usually an “extra” on the table. 
It does supply variety for farm families when available. 

In the aggregate game consumed by the rural population is un- 
doubtedly of considerable consequences and releases for market domes- 
tic items that would otherwise be used by the rural families. Farmers 
are not required to buy licenses when hunting on their own properties 
and seldom report to the game department the head of game taken 
during the legal open season, so the amount of game they use on their 
tables cannot be known. 

WILD FUR 


Money for wild fur may be realized by the farmer by his either 
trapping the animals or selling trapping privileges. The method most 
advantageous to the farmer depends largely upon local circumstances. 
Estimates as to what proportion of the total annual crop is harvested 


16 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


by farmers vary greatly. Recent investigations indicate that perhaps | 
the largest proportion of wild fur is trapped by professional trappers ~ 
from the cities. In some instances farmers or farm boys get money 
from furs trapped in their local communities. They seldom confine — 
their activities to their own property, but the money they get, on an © 
average, seldom exceeds $100 annually. For familes on submarginal | 
land this cash item may be of critical importance. More successful | 
farmers do not have time to trap over wide districts, and such trapping © 
is necessary to earn any considerable income from wild-fur animals || 
frequenting agricultural land; however, the per-acre revenue from | 
some muskrat marshes is said to equal that of nearby agricultural land. | 

The sale of wild fur probably returns several million dollars annu- © 
ally to the rural population of this country. Intensive studies now || 
being conducted under the Pittman-Robertson Act in some of the best | 
fur-producing States indicate that considerably less than half the © 
receipts from raw furs go to farmers and farm boys, so previous esti- © 
mates were apparently too high. . 

In 1929, when prices were much higher than in recent years and the © 
take of wild fur was greater, the annual market value ot this product | 
in the United States was estimated at 65 million dollars. Some 
authorities maintain that this estimate is high even for that period. 
There has been a great decline in the take of wild furs and in the price 
obtained, and studies indicate that the annual gross receipts from wild | 
fur may not have exceeded 20 to 25 millon dollars in recent years. 

The sale of trapping privileges on marshlands may be of consider- 
able consequence, but the money received for the privilege of trapping | 
terrestrial forms of wild fur on better types of farm land is seldom | 
an appreciable item. Usually the privilege is freely given, for the 
farmer is glad to get rid of foxes, minks, skunks, and some other fur 
animals. 

It has been repeatedly pointed out, however, that the several million 
dollars received by rural people for raw furs is received by farm fam- 
ilies who are badly in need of cash to supplement their income from 
farming. Therefore, farmer receipts from wild fur are of much more 
relative importance than the market value would indicate. 


CoMPARATIVE VALUE OF GAME AND WILp-FuR PropucTs AND 
oF AGRICULTURAL PRoDUCTS 


DIFFICULTIES ENCOUNTERED 


An estimated money value of the annual game and wild-fur crop is 
often compared with the sales value of some agricultural crop. The 
only apparent reason for this is that both are products of the soil and 
so are competitors, more or less, for the use of the land and for the 
farmers’ time and resources. Because such comparisons almost totally 
lack a basis and yet are frequently carried to erroneous conclusions, 
any discussions of the subject are fraught with possibilities of mis- 
takes, misunderstandings, and misinterpretations. However, in a 
report of this nature the subject cannot be ignored. 

There is almost no statistical information pertaining to game and 
wild-fur production and utilization. A few State game departments 
require hunters and trappers to report the amount of game and fur 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION LZ 


taken during the year, but the percentage of returns in these States is 
disappointingly low. <A greater number of the State game depart- 
ments require reports from buyers of raw fur; so the information on 
furs is more complete although still inadequate. No technique has 
been devised that will provide an adequate inventory of the lving 
game and fur animals of a State, and most States could not afford to 
tabulate and analyze the figures regarding the kill. The only avail- 
able figures regarding the “inventory or the take of ¢ game and wild 
fur for the country as a whole are rather crude estimates. 

For agricultural crops and livestock, on the other hand, there are 
reliable estimates of production, marketing, and home and farm use. 
The need for providing facilities in State and Federal Government for 
collecting, analyzing, and supplying reliable and comparable wildlife 
statistics 1s apparent. 

Then there is a decided difference between the status of ownership of 
wildlife and of farm crops. The ownership of game by the State in its 
sovereign capacity, in trust for the benefit of “the people, rests upon 
common law and not upon statutes. The courts of the 48 States have 
established the ownership of all wildlife in the people as a whole— 
that is, in the State—which can dispose of it only according to spe- 
cific laws. These laws limit the disposition of wildlife to only a few 
species of birds and mammals and then only by selling or granting 
individuals the right to take a specified number of the specified species 
for specific uses. The ownership of crops, however, has always rested 
with the individual who produces them, and their disposition usually 
rests solely upon the decision of the individual. Itis his prerogative to 
dispose of them in the quantity and in the way he chooses, without too 
much regard for his neighbor. This is still fundamentally so, although 
conservative decisions of recent years indicate a vast public interest in 
soll conservation and orderly distribution of agricultural products. 

Who produces game and wild fur? Is it the State or the private 
landowner? The answer should be,—Both in cooperation. But in the 
past this fact has not been adequately acknowledged. There is no 
question as to who produces the farm crops. 

With these difficulties to overcome, is it any wonder that current 
discussions and reports as to the value of wildlife are confusing to 
say the least, and sometimes give money values that are considered 
excessive? This 1s particularly true when comparing the value of the 
game and wild-fur crop with that of certain farm crops. In these 
discussions and reports the value of wildlife is frequently calculated 
as the estimated money turn-over occasioned directly and indirectly by 
wildlife, plus the estimated value of the meat and fur taken by the 
hunter and trapper, plus the theoretical value of the outdoor recrea- 
tion; whereas the farm-crop value is the statistically estimated market 
value of those parts of the farm crop that are sold or used on the 
farm. 

Wildlife is of inestimable value to the Nation for it provides es- 
thetic, social, and recreational outlets for the people and it is the 
foundation of some industries and stimulates activities in many 
others. But it is evident that the money value frequently attributed 
to the annual wildlife crops is probably exaggerated. 

322408°—42—_-3 


18 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


SUGGESTIONS FOR AN ACCEPTABLE COMPARISON 


As wild birds and mammals are more or less competitors of farm 
crops which the landowner produces because of their money value, 
it 1s desirable to develop some acceptable means of comparing values. 
For this reason the following suggestions and comparisons are made. 

A more acceptable way to compare the value of the game and wild- 
fur crop with that of farm crops than the one now used would be to 
compare the value of the wild meat and fur taken by hunters and 
trappers with the gross value of an agricultural crop or livestock 
product. Even in this comparison care must be exercised not to take 
fictitious values for the meat and fur. This would require reliable 
statistics relative to game and fur and some method of estimating a 
fair price for wild meat. 

There are no acceptable statistical estimates of the value of the wild 
meat and fur harvested each year by hunters and trappers. Avail- 
able data indicate that any one of 15 or more farm crops, livestock, 
and livestock products have a greater value than the aggregate direct 
value of all wild meat and fur taken in a vear. 

More industries are dependent upon farm crops than are dependent 
upon wildlife, and many individual farm crops involve more business 
activity and employ more people than does wildlife. But it must be 
recognized that several industries are largely dependent upon wildhte 
and that wildlife causes considerable business activity, furnishes em- 
ployment for many people, and has esthetic and recreational value 
that cannot be measured in money. But so do farm crops. All of 
this leads to the conclusion that wildlife is one of our land use crops 
that has a value sufficiently great to be seriously considered by farm- 
ers and land use planners. 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND USE ON 
AGRICULTURAL LANDS 


IMPORTANCE OF AGRICULTURAL LANDS 


CLASSIFICATION OF GAME AND FUR SPECIES ACCORDING TO 
HABITAT REQUIREMENTS 


A classification of game with respect to its optimum or preferred 
habitat may assist in evaluating agricultural lands in relation to the 
production and utilization of game and wild fur. The American 
game policy. adopted by the American Game Association in 1930, 
divided game into four classes, as follows: 

(1) “Farm game, which inhabits class B land. It thrives best on 
farms with suitable cover. 

Class B land is land fae is too high in value for the public to buy, 
own, or manage in quantities exclusively for wildlife. The bobwhite 
quail, cottontail rabbit, ring-necked pheasant. Hungarian partridge, 
and fox squirrel are considered farm game species. 

(2) “Forest and range game, which inhabits class A lands. It 
thrives best on land partially farmed.” 


® AMERICAN GAME ASSOCIATION. ‘Transactions of the 17th American Game Conference 
(1930), 17: 286. 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 19 


Class A land is low enough in v ralue for the puble to own or man- 
age. Forest and range game includes the white-tailed deer, mule deer, 
black-tailed deer, wild turkey, pinnated grouse, sharp- tailed grouse, 
ruffed grouse, sage hen, western quails, black bear, antelope, and oray 
squirrel ; 

(3) “Wilderness game, which inhabits very cheap class A land. It 
is excluded by farming, or other economic uses.” 

According to the classification given by the American Game Asso- 
ciation, wilderness game includes such species as elk, bison, grizzly 
bear, moose, mountain sheep, and mountain goat. 

(4) “Migratory game, which inhabits both classes of land. It 
thrives on farm land if marsh lands are left undrained.” 

Migratory game includes such. species as shore birds, the woodcock, 
river ducks, sea ducks, geese, and doves. 

It seems probable that a similar classification for fur neal would 
be of use in this discussion, and for convemence in comparison fur 
animals may be classified as: 

(1) Farm fur animals, which inhabit class B land. They thrive 
best on farm land. 

The list would include the opossum, red fox, skunk, civet cat, and 
weasel. 

(2) Forest and range fur animals, which inhabit class A land. They 
thrive best on lands partially devoted to agriculture. 

Forest and range fur animals would include the black bear, bobeat 
cougar, coyote, wolf, and gray fox. 

(3) Land and w ater fur animals, which inhabit both classes of land. 
They thrive wherever lakes, marshes, and sloughs are left undrained 
and wherever streams flow continuously, if food and cover are available. 

This group would include such animals as the beaver, muskrat, 
mink, otter, and raccoon. 

(4) Wilderness fur animals, which inhabit very cheap class A land. 
They are usually extirpated or greatly reduced by agriculture or other 
economic uses of the land. 

Such species as the grizzly bear, lynx, fisher, marten, and wolverine 
would be included. 

(5) Marine fur animals, which inhabit coastal waters only. 

This list would be limited largely to the seal, sea lion, walrus, and 
sea otter. These animals are under national or international control, 
so do not enter into this discussion. 


HABITAT PROVIDED ON AGRICULTURAL LANDS 


One method of appraising the importance of agricultural lands 
in the production of game and wild fur is to estimate how much wild- 
life habitat agricultur: al lands provide. 

Animal- -specialty, cash-grain, crop-specialty, dairying, fruit, general, 
livestock, poultry, and tr uck farming involve great var jations in the 
intensity ‘of land use and in food and cover provided for wildlife. Con- 
sequently, although quantity and quality vary, many types of wildlife 
habitat are found on farm lands. (See figs. 4-10.) 


20 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


Figure 4+.—Nonarable areas on the farm are an asset if permitted to produce 
wildlife food and cover. The soil is protected and pheasants, quail, rabbits, and 
wild-fur animals thrive in such areas. 


Se 


FIGURE 5.—Except on level land, ultraclean farming is poor land use. It leads to 
water and wind erosion of the soil and provides no habitat for game and wild-fur 
animals or song and insectivorous birds. 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 21 


Ficure 6.—Here is farming that may be good for wildlife, but does not provide a 
decent income for the occupants, even though the land is fertile. The returns 
from such farming do not pay farm production costs, and the returns from 
game and wild fur, which are probably greater than those from crops, fail to 
pay taxes on good land. 


ea) 
(oa 
) 
‘cl 
4 
ea) 
oO 
4 
am 
OS 
<j 


OF 


CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT 


22 


t 


Vv 


M 


OFHDEL: 


pur [Ios JO ponpoardAq yury 


\\ poo 


Qe 
oO 


yo want 


x 


vu v 


op 


4 


\¢ 


toda ue 
»Ld OSTR A 


op 
OUL 


VU 


4 


aq U1 


OLY [OT 


> 
, 


9) 


OJTTPTIA. Pp 
ISB O[Geys 


tS) 
v 


Q 
oO 


? 
» 


vurur sny} puryT ud 
SOIMSSR JLYJ ISN pur 


“Sur 
[| poos 


IGT It 


, 
, 


on 


9) 


G 


ad WIM 7U 


o1s 


IJVAJSUOUOP Sodtovtd 


‘HOTJVALOSUOD 
Heyy 


ISUO. 
ISO 


) 


L 


L 


1v 


L 


r 
N 


OLOT 


4 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION Ze 


IGURE 8.—Excellent farm-management and wildlife practices. The border of 
lespedeza provides erosion control, a turnrow, and wildlife food and cover. 
The inner border of shrubs prevents encroachment of the woodland into the 


cultivated field, protects the woodland from winds, and, at the same time, 
provides good wildlife habitat. 


eo 


Figure 9.—White-tailed deer, the most widespread and popular big-game animal 
in the United States is practical only on range and wooded areas insofar as 
agriculture is concerned. Deer frequently become a serious problem when 
their range includes cropland. 


24 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


saan 


kee IP leg? nae p FUR, 


; 
E 
3 
7 


Figure 10.—A Southwestern landscape showing wise and unwise grazing prac- 
tices. A, produces inferior livestock, destroys the soil, and eliminates wildlife : 
B, produces good livestock, protects the soil, and provides wildlife habitat. 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION 


AND UTILIZATION 


TABLE 1.—Habitat classification of American game species * 


Estimated composition of optimum range Land 
ie Se value per 
ei acre of 
‘ul ti- present or 
Grass- | Brush- | Wood- | Marsh- ° 
vated Water | prospective 
land land | land land land Pp ange A 
1. Farm game: Percent| Percent | Percent | Percent | Percent | Percent Dollars 
BOD White seme as Pye eter She Pies) 40 20 (Ii eee: Hcg) | Re Sha kh | Fee adr | 10-100 
Copiromnbailkesin Ga geen Ae ee ae 40 20 A.) 5p pote a | apa W ye sly 10-100 
Ring-necked pheasant_______________ 40 10 De aes ate OAR Swe wi 25-100 
Hungarian partridge_________________ 7 CoO Ak peso Se [i ty te Uh ck 50-100 
HOXES UIT =e eee 30 | Pe) ee a a CAUYE || ee (ha a ae 10-100 
2. Forest and range game: 
White-tailed deer______.____________- 15 15 | 35 etree fe eee eet yl bec mer 2-10 
Mule deer and black-tailed deer.____|________ 20 60 AU) (ae ee Ne ed 0-36 
WaltGituireke ies ney Meee oie he 5 WS) eee See 45 AOR a as. SR Ee ee 2-25 
RIMM AveCGGoROUSC asses aoa 25 30 ZU GSC) fe sey ele (Been ser SEM Ta ae DO 2-10 
Shanp-tailedserousessta es es ee 40 G0) Fs | eee | LS) ese UR 2-10 
TR ONOCNG EA ROWS Seat Ae ate Ss | aera | Efe og 60 AO i lesa ew eclelyiet Poe 2-10 
SRO LV SS Ee ais a ae ee aa ed (eee ICO Oe ek ey ell fe cs eve odt- i eae Pale aes 0-4 
IWeSCeRM EC alle ia inna o ae 8) 25 25 Fah ORGY is See ge ag ee | SS 0-100 
Bake 6 armen remem tags te a | ieee yt 40 GOS eer egens SAI onan 2-10 
BARTLET OD re ees ee tendons Cale eee he ah fei 75 PASy | tee eas a ae Se ne ee Ree 0-4 
(Graves UIC leet he Soe ULE | ea Elie de |p ak ECO | ee ene | See 4-50 
3. Wilderness game: | 
MW ic Sg ee ACS Sg Sed ae ae eee eee a eee Re 20 40 A () 5 | ts Gree BN Re Eee 2-4 
JSG OO, Ps A ee os A CO nee ee of ACO care acts ais ge sre | cea ee we 0-4 
Gri7lyADeaieaae me nee Reiser | SSO ah Se 60 AQ | eee | Dee ee 0-4 
IMI@OBO Ae wee SE Be aie Ca ee ya a 40 40 20a eee a 2-4 
IMioumrainesheCe preset a. ee ee | a ee 65 Bon ee Rly a ||TonisU eee 0-2 
IVTOUTEAIINES 0 a eee en ee els er TOO | Rae eS i eh ee rae Stealer | etree 0-2 
4. Migratory game: 
Shore birds, except woodcock________|_______- SD) Wenge Bobs sie ee 50 |__ | 
ico dock: Be ay he Be 2 eee el (es he 40 20 40 Til 
hy eT GLU C KiSies een alg a esa 20) | foreseen [ee petite SOA 40 40 z 
SCORGIULC KG ieee SaRicpran ty. kM en a psa ASE NN ik eM More We Ao] Te ea igat 40 60 All values 
(Gee Scere Sere care acter AE i iy ig 20 DAs ea esa ae gs |p ce 20 40 
IDNOA HOSTS ee se ee ual 5 Mele oe oye ae Claes ea a eo DAG i Se eee A ee ge ! 


1 Data adapted from Transactions of the Seventeenth American Game Conference, }). 309, 1930. 
2 Land value based on agricultural value. 


TABLE 2.—Habitat classification of American fur-animal species 


Estimated composition of optimum range Land 
eae i" value 
per acre 
Species Culti- | of present 
Sarit Grass- | Brush- | Wood- | Marsh-| y, mriaroilt lt ses 
Tara land land | land land y spective 
| range ! 
1. Farm fur animals: Percent | Percent | Percent | Percent | Percent | Percent Dollars 
OOK VION AS See Gee ee eee 20) | eee 35 A Gra | atsa aa | aera ee Ga 10-100 
ROG Ore! Bee Ss AE Sk eel a ete 20 ashe 40 GUNA yw al a MS ea 5-100 
Siktin espe eaters eee rea SS Me 3s oe 30 10 40 20\| ies 2 Seed ee anon = 3 0-100 
(On Gali sees Se eS ee 20 10 50 7 |e ag eos Pg De 0-100 
AVI Se] tee ame rere SI eh ERIS Fe 20 10 40 30) A Poa ta aN ei 0-100 
2. Forest and range fur animals 
IBA Cke ea reece mie e fe lMea getMeta ola A a ee 40 GQ) | tee seers cee alae erate 2-10 
BO OVER ee Says 2 wee AI RL Sele eet) We ieee cel Meg ain ees 50 Fo} Oa fh eral Ue aks | cere 0-25 
COU CA eer SME Cem SoM miner pon Ulaal te 20 40 A () | Seat Ia ce cee 2k 0-10 
COs, eR rE ES OA OS es Ss 15 50 Fa ee Sea a Pea er Pcs 2-50 
V0 ligula mee en MT ne th te 20 30 EO) fe ieeareee els goes 0-25 
(Clralygl O xeee ene ma Geb Ee Ee Sk Paria | een yas 2a eee Aor | ne ee 0-50 
3. Land and water fur animals: 
1 CAN. C eee eee Se erie ea a athe elle ue 20 File ae ee 20 60 0-10 
IVIRIS kia ener ese Tie hak a Wok an BEG eh eee ese 80 20 0-10 
1 enn ean e reat. er Ri mies ea a one ee 40 60 0-10 
Ofer es eee te rt MR eee ey eee eee ieee tout eS) 30 7 0-10 
EVAC COO Tima ee tel Neste NR esses Tee I or eal | 20 60 NN) Nese SS 4-25 
4. Wilderness fur animals: 
GrizAysbeartwares eee SN ek DA 60 AQ A aeRO AE: 0-4 
UO a ee SS OL STR SA a a es ee a stl vete LOO este cli teas) ky ok Bie 0-4 
FRSC rae rere nao nea can SUN gy en tis ig Ete E SOO sp Sete enh res rare terertses 0-4 
IV [fer Crna een eae erate eee ae Sy Vaal btN NE Neate og aon NIC) Gp anne ce ees Eee 0-4 
AWGN era ae eT (ee a 20 Sail eens i Cetera eae 0-4 
5. Marine fur animals (not considered) ____|________]______ I a PSP | PO Co ad Aa eer a ed Heol = me 


1 Land value based on agricultural value. 
323408 °—42——4 


26 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


Most of the land used fon agriculture, which includes livestock pro- 
duction on range land as well as crop and livestock production on 
farms, is in private ownership. The rest is found in public grazing 
lands, national forests, or other publicly owned lands on which ] pr ivate 
interests have leased agricultural use rights. Even on these publicly 
owned lands, agricultural uses have priority rights to the extent of the 
lease, which may approach the carrying capacity of the range. 

The Land Planning Committee of the National Resources Board. 
in discussing grazing policies,‘ says, “The policy, announced by the 
Secretary of Agriculture in 1905, at the time this department took 
charge of the national forests, namely, that the water, food, and forest 
should be used for the benefit of the home builder first of all, has been 
a guiding policy 1 in forest administration.” As grazing is the princi- 
pal economic use to which much land in the W est is put, agriculture 
assumes priority rights in many of the national forests. 

Other public agencies have followed much the same policy in the 
administration of their lands. At present, however, approximately 
one-half of the range land in the United States is privately owned, and 
by paying grazing fees, stockmen procure interest in the public grazing 
lands that is recognized by the administering agencies to the extent 
that stockmen have preferential rights in the use of the range. In 
many instances, accor ding to the estimates of experts, the number of 
livestock under permit is equal to the carrying capacity. Therefore, 
under present conditions this range land is primarily devoted to agri- 
cultural uses, with these uses of the land determining to a large extent 
its suitability and availability for other purposes. 

The 1935 census of agriculture discloses that there were 1,054.515.111 
acres of land in farms, which constituted 55.4 percent of the United 
States. The Land Planning Committee’s report of the National Re-_ 
sources Board, in discussing the relation of pasture acreage to other 
uses of land, shows that there were 57 77,900,000 acres of aoricultural 
land not in farms—that is, grazed range land, which constituted an- 
other 30.4 percent of the United States.° Thus in 1934, 85.8 percent of 
the United States was agricultural land. It is clearly evident that. 
on the basis of area, agricultural land provides a very large percentage 
of the wildlife habitat in this country. 

Because every acre of agricultural land does not provide food and 
cover for game and wild- fur animals, it seems advisable to refine this 
estimate somewhat. Table 3 shows the classes and subclasses of land 
and the major land use areas, the acreages devoted to each, and the 
estimated percentages and acreage of each that is now providing cover 
or food, or both, for game and fur animals. In estimating the acreages 
of cover and food, no attempt was made to evaluate or indicate the 
quality or the carrying capacity of the land. But for land to be con- 
sidered as pr oviding food or cover, it must possess the essentials for 
wildlife during the ‘critical time of the year, usually late in winter or 
early in spring. in sufficient quantities and of such qualities as to be 
usable by the game or fur animals common to that area. The acreages 
given in table 3 as providing cover and food for game and fur animals 


‘UNITED STATES NATIONAL RESOURCES BOARD. AGRICULTURAL LAND REQUIREMENTS AND 
RESOURCES, Part 3 of the Supplementary Report of the Land Planning Committee. 64 pp. 
Washington, D. C. 1935. 


= See footnote 4, p. 30. 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 7AT 


were estimated by experienced biologists and economists who are fa- 
miliar with agriculture and other land use conditions, and with wild- 
life and its administration, production, and utilization throughout the 
Nation. 

A study of the percentages in table 3 indicates that the agricultural 
use of the land is relatively favorable to the production of cover and 
food for game and fur animals as compared with most nonagricultural 
uses. According to these estimates, it 1s believed that 48 percent of the 
land in farms and 81 percent of the agricultural land not in farms are 
providing food and cover for game and fur animals, and 59 percent 
of the agricultural land pr ovides 81.6 percent of the wildlife habitat 
of the country. 

According to this table, when all agricultural land is compared with 
all nonagricultural land, 59 percent of the former and 68 percent of the 
latter are providing food and cover for game and wild-fur animals. 
Some species depend for their existence upon agricultural land, or 
rather upon the conditions which agricultural pursuits create, and 
where these species are important game species, agriculture and the 
land devoted to it will be of even gr reater importance to wildlife pro- 
duction than is here indicated. 


TaBLE 3.—EHstimated acreage providing food and cover for wildlife, by classes 
of land, 1935 


Providing food and cover 
Per- |————— —S— 

cent- 5 

| mar Per- cent 

Class of land Ownership vow pro- cent- pee 

| viding Aven age of land 

food all food as 

| and and of the 
cover ! cover United 

| States 

—— Sl ee | | | 
Agricultural: | | 
Land in farms: 1,000 acres| Percent |\1,000 acres| Percent | Percent 
Cropland sas Private. 222 2 3 415, 335 | 25 103, 834 | 9.0 | 5.4 
Openipasture= 24s 9s SES es as GOB eis OY 3 409, 805 | 50 204,902 | 17.8 | 10.8 
IWi0Od lan Geee sar ol ale thea th | tae GOs Ns de 3 185,475 | 85 | 157, 654 | BS 7 8.3 
PACINO tlverp] cin Cl es a GO eereetee ses 3 43, 900 | 85 | 37, 315 3.2 | 2.0 
ADORE 5 ee Mee a IPod Eo eee) 1, 054, 515 | 48 | 503, 705 43.7 | 26.5 
Land not in farms: | | | 
Forest and woodland grazed__| Publie___________- 4 132, 612 | 80 | 106,089; 9.2] 5.6 
E15) ee ee ae ee EEN Privates se 4143, 100 90 | 128, 790 11.2 6.8 
~Nonforest and woodland | Public ____-__._ 6163353 | 75 [122/515 |2r°10)'7 6.4 
grazed. | | | 

1 DG Re Ro ea Og nes IPrivatere ees 497, 700 | 80 | 78, 160 6.8 4.1 
ARON. 2 lags i el See tale Plier _| 5 536, 765 | 81 | 435, 554 37.9 22.9 
AulagriCculturailandews vases |i 2 er be ee 1, 591, 280 | 59 | 939, 259 81.6 | 49.4 


1These percentages were estimated by biologists and economists who are thoroughly 
familiar with land use, agriculture, and wildlife habitat in each State and were based upon a 
study of each class of land. 

2The figures in this column show only the acreage providing tood and cover; they do 
not consider quality of food and cover which really determine the wildlife carryil g 
capacity of the area. 

* Data from the 1935 agricultural census. 

£ Compiled from Part III of the Supplementary Report of the Land Planning Committee, 
National Resources Board, pp. 35—48. 

> Agricultural land not in farms is really greater than shown because considerable other 
land is grazed by domestic animals and some other land is used for crops, particularly in 
urban areas and on Indian reservations. 


28 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


TABLE 3.—Estimated acreage providing food and cover for wildlife, by classes of 
land, 1935—Continued 


Providing food and cover 


Per- 
cent- 
age Per- 
now Per- | centage 
Class of land Ownership Total pro- cent- | of total 
area viding age of | land 
food Area allfood| area 
and and of the 
cover cover | United 
States 
Nonagricultural: 
SPeClalvliScs= =) ssa =ae ae a eee 1,000 acres| Percent\1,000 acres| Percent| Percent 
Urhan {73 percent public___}|________ aH lies 8 ie EA eee eee 
Sie ap Eee Le ee 75 percent private__| 9, 840 10 984 Sal a 
TEL owes eee ee ee Teo 8 17, 787 75 13, 340 152, aii 
Railroad rights-of-way -_.-..__| Private___________ 8 64, 055 70 2, 838 a3 A 
Statevparnkshe 2 = sso ss eee JONG sh 7 3, 810 90 | 3, 429 +8 A, 
INiationalparks and) monu=s|=s=) =don een eens 8 12,919 | OOF L627 1.0 .6 
ments 
Indian reservations- _____-_--_]-_=_ Ove 205 i Pe 8 51, 400 75 | 38, 550 3.4 2.0 
ATTY; TESCLVALIONS == | eee 6 yee eae 9 1, 502 75 | 1, 127 eal sil 
Naviy- FeSELVALIONS= seamen nae dose Se Ee 10 389 40 | . 156 | (21) (11) 
OFA a eee se ce ee ee || ee ae See a eR 101, 702 71 72, 051 | 6.4 3.8 
Forest and woodland not grazed__| Public____________ 12 36, 799 70 25, 759 Wy Pe 5B} 
DD) Ot eee eae. a a En Re A iRrivate= =]. 12 116, 573 90 | 104,915 9.1 5a 
cB OS Fes Men i es aa. A See ee pete all TERE aie 85 130, 674 eS 6.8 
Other nonagricultural land________ Rublics=== aaa 13 55, 466 15 8, 320 sul .4 
Other nonagricultural land________ IPs oe 13 1, 397 10 1403)7 1C®) (41) 
Motels eesti Ok ae See her a 56, 863 15 8, 460 | velit Pie 
Allmonacriculpuralelean Geese | meee ee een 311, 937 68 211, 185 18.4 11.0 
Motaleland> jarea sof) thew | ea eee 1, 903, 217 60 |1. 150,444 | 100.0 60. 4 
United States 
All private-owned land (74.9 per- |____________________ 1, 424, 720 VFA 9 HI aisir/ ALD | ZBEG 
cent of United States) ; 
All public-owned land (25sie pers | menses ee oe 478, 497 69 | 331, 157 28.8 17.4 


cent of United States) | 


6 Data from unpublished reports by O. E. Baker, U. S. Department of Agriculture. 

7 Data from the National Resources Board’s Recreational Uses of Land in the United 
States, prepared by the National Park Service, Part XI of the Supplementary Report of 
the Land Planning Committee, p. 122. 

8 Data from publications of the U. S. Department of the Interior. 

° Data from U. S. War Department Statistical Report, July 1937. 

Data from U. 8S. Navy Department, Federal-owned Real Estate Under Control of the 
Navy Department. 

41 Less than 0.05 percent. 

122, QObtained by subtracting grazed forest and woodland not in farms from the total 
forest and woodland not in farms in the United States as given by the National Resources 
Board Report, Part VIII of the Supplementary Report of the Land Planning Committee, 
p. 78. Some of it is in wildlife refuges. 

13 Obtained by subtracting grazed nonforest or woodland not in farms from the total non- 
forest or woodland not in farms in the United States as given by various Government 
reports. Some of it is in wildlife refuges. 


IMPROVEMENT OF HABITAT ON AGRICULTURAL LANDS 


Interest is currently expressed in the possibilities of improving 
wildlife habitat on agricultural lands. Table 4 indicates the per- 
centage of agricultural land on which farm managers and conserva- 
tionists believe it would be economically feasible to improve wildlife 
habitat in accordance with present recommended land use practices. 
The degree of practicable improvement is variable and the estimates 
include the spheres of influence as well as the areas actually treated. 

Table 4 indicates that 58 percent of the land in farms, 90 percent of 
the agricultural land not in farms, and 70 percent of the nonagricul- 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 29 


tural land is not providing the quantity of desirable wildlife habitat 
that could be realized by economical and feasible management. The 
percentages also indicate that approximately 84 percent of the wildlife 
habitat considered economically feasible of improvement is on agri- 
cultural land, with such land not in farms presenting the greatest 
possibilities for wildlife habitat improvement. An inspection of the 
uses made of nonagricultural land shows that there is little possibility 
of habitat improvement on this land. Privately owned land provides 
more than 71 percent of the wildlife habitat that is economically prac- 


ticable for improvement. 
GAME AND WILD FUR PRODUCED AND HARVESTED ON AGRICULTURAL LANDS 


As all of the estimated favorable habitat of farm game, approxi- 
mately 50 percent of that of forest and range game, and about 40 
percent of that of migratory game, is agricultural land, it appears that 
at least 80 to 85 percent of the game has been produced on agricultural 
land as defined in this publication. Indications are that in recent 
years farm game has constituted approximately 68 percent of the kill, 
forest and range game 21 percent, and migratory game 11 percent. 


TABLE 4.—Hstimated acreage on which it is considered economically feasible 


to improve food and cover for wildlife, by classes of land, 1935 
Economically feasible to 
improve for food and 
Percent- CONE 
age Ta ee 
econom- | 
: i | Per: 
nae Total ically Per- cent- 
Class of land Ownership Daa feasible cent- | age of 
o im- ; j 
: age of | total 
prove for Area 2 all | land 
food and | ~ aaalh hoe 
rea ree ood | area 
and of the 
cover ? | United 
States 
Agricultural land: 

Land in farms: 1,000 acres| Percent \1,000 acres| Percent | Percent 
C@roplandigeeses sari se ds Jb yen es ee 3 415, 335 30} 124, 601 9.6 6.5 
Open pasture_______________ ist Pi] Eee eey ISS 2 409, 805 67 | 275,863 | 21.2 14.5 
Woollen! 3 ss 5 ssa See a AUX KO) 2 cee oe 3 185, 475 90 | 166,928 | 12.8 8.8 
All other land=___- oes eR GL Oy tata Sty 3 43, 900 90 39, 510 | 320 Zell 

TMG £5 5 eae eae a 1, 054, 515 | 58 606, 902 | 46.6 31.9 
Land not in farms: ae | | a 
Forest and woodland grazed_| Public__.________- 4132, 612 90 | 119,350) 9.2 6.3 
HD) 2 aes are pee a ee privates ss5 225 4148, 100 | 90 | 128,790 | 9.9 6.8 
Nonforest and woodland | | 
VANOLN OEE ee) Meee nee Publicass) 0m os 4168, 353 | 90) 1477018) | = 11.3 lek 
Nonforest and woodland | 
ST AZCCRspee ete ok Be os. oF 2 EriVvaten coo se 497,700 | 90 87,930 | 6.7 4.6 
Avo telmeeemecer rae mh ey 5 536, 765 90. | 483,088 | 37.1 25.4 
Allvacriculturalvlandes.* 5 9 bay te |1, 591, 280 | 68 1,089,990 83.7 57.3 


‘These percentages were estimated by biologists and economists who are thoroughly 
familiar with land use, agriculture, and wildlife habitat in each State and were based 
upon a study of each class of land. 

* The figures in this column show only the acreage on which it is considered economically 
feasible to improve food and cover. They do not pretend to consider quality of food and 
cover which really determine the wildlife carrying capacity of the area. 

3 Data from the 1935 agricultural census. 

*Compiled from Part II of the Supplementary Report of the Land Planning Committee, 
National Resources Board, pp. 35—48, 

° Agricultural land not in farms is really larger than shown here because considerable 
other land is grazed by domestic animals, and some other land is used for crops, particularly 
in urban areas and Indian reservations. 


30 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


TABLE 4.—Estimated acreage on which it is considered economically feasible to — 
improve food and cover for wildlife, by classes of land, 1935—Continued 


| Economically feasible to | 
| improve for food and ) 


Oh tose 


ow | 


Percent-| C°Ver 
age ; 
econom- 
A = Per- 
a : Total ically Per- cent- 
Class of land Ownership area | eas cent- | age of 
prove for Area ? age of total 
food and Saas land 
concn 00 area 
and of the 
cover 2? | United 
| States 
Nonagricultural land: 
Special uses 1,000 acres| Percent |1,000 acres| Percent| Percent 
Unban! (ae publiel!255222|-¢22) sei Bie ee ee 
Toes wee Son, Bw Ct TT 75% private.______| 69,840 1, 968 2 
Highwayseei essen” eee: Publick== area e 6 17, 13, 340 1.0 
Railroad rights-of-way _____- Privates) 6 4,055 3, 041 s2 
Statesparksit2 = oe 5 oa ablickes sees is 3, 048 ie 
National parks and monu- |_____ (cht oe a es 812, 10, 335 23 
ments 
Indian reservations--___----_}_____ GOs tse SEE ee 8 51, 38, 550 3.0 2.0 
Army reservations______--_-]_____ 6 0 en eee 91,5 1, 202 aa All 
INaivay- TESELVaALlONS see eee doss2 eae 10 194 (11) = 
"ROG SS: ee 2 he a Deg, eae ee 101 71, 678 5) eae 
Forest and woodland not grazed.| Public____-_-___- 12 36, 25,759| 2.0] 1. 
QS en Rr Privates] = 12 116 104, 915 8.0 aye 
TO t al 2S a ee = oe ee eee | Sr ee ee ean 153 130, 674 10.0 6.8 
Other nonagricultural land__| Public____________ 13 55 11, 093 | she) 6 
DO. See eee Privaleen =e ees 13 J, 210 (13) (11) 
Totalas =e eae De Neckar 5S ea ae a 56, 863 20 11, 303 .8 .6 
All nonagricultural land____|_.._____-__---______ 311, 937 68 | 213,655| 16.3] 11.2 
Total land sareas Ole t Rew a se 1, 903, 217 68 |1, 303,646 | 100.0 68.5 
United States | 
All private-owned land (74.9% of |_..----------------- 1, 424, 720 | 66 | 933,264| 71.6) 49.0 
United States) | 
AUS public-owmed landh(25:19s ofa ae eee 478, 497 | Vd. 370, 382 28.4 19.5 
United States) | 
5’ Data from capuplched reports by O. E. Baker, U. S. Department of Agriculture. 


*Data from the National Resources Board’s oeeaniosal Uses of Land in the United 
States, prepared by the National Park Service, Part XI of the Supplementary Report of 
the Land Planning Committee, p. 122. 

> Data from publications of the U. S. Department of the Interior. 

’ Data from U. 8. War Department ‘Statistical Report. July 1937. 

1° Data from U. S. Navy Department, Federal-owned Real Estate Under Control of the 
Navy Department. 

11 Less than 0.05 percent. 

12 Obtained by subtracting grazed forest and woodland not in farms from the total forest 
and woodland not in farms in the United States as given by the National Resources Board 
Report, Part VIII of the Supplementary Report of the Land Planning Committee, p. 78. 
Some of it is wildlife refuges. 

13 Obtained by subtracting grazed nonforest or woodland not in farms from the total! 
nonforest or woodland not in farms in the United States as given by various Government 
reports. Some of it is wildlife refuges. 


Evidence indicates that about 70 percent of the game reported 
killed was taken on agricultural land and about 30 percent on non- 
agricultural land. This does not take into account game taken by 
farmers and farm boys hunting on their own or rented agricultural 
lands nor does it consider that no Corn Belt, Wheat Belt, or Range 
State is represented in the data on hand. It is believed, therefore, 
that if a representative sample of the total bag of game were avail- 
able. it would indicate that more than 80 percent of the game taken 
during recent years was killed on agricultural land. However, m 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION Sill 


a few nonagricultural States, estimates range as low as 30 to 40 per- 
cent. The estimate of 80 percent is supported by the statements of 

many game departments that 90 percent or more of the hunting 
licenses sold were used almost exclusively for hunting farm-game 
species and that practically all nonlicensed hunters hunt farm- game 
species exclusively. 

The unit weight of most forest and range game is, of course, much 
greater than that of farm game. However, a considerable number 
of units of forest and range game are taken on agricultural land, and 
many farm species are taken on nonagricultural land. Thus, even on 
a weight basis, the relationships noted would not be materially 
changed. 

Estimates of the number of fur pelts taken in the various States 
were arrived at by using available trappers’ reports, in conjunction 
with State game department records of furs handled by dealers, and, 
in a few instances, game department estimates of fur animals taken 
by trappers. This appeared to be the most practical way of meeting 
the situation. 

Classifying the catch on the basis of the effective range inhabited 
by the species as shown in table 2, it was found that, approximately 
27 percent was farm fur animals (not fur farm animals), less than 1 
percent forest and range fur animals, 71 percent land and water 
species, and approximately 1 percent wilderness animals. It is esti- 
mated that half of the forest and range fur animals and a third or 
more of the land and water fur bearers were associated with agri- 
cultural land. Thus, it seems reasonable to believe that 50 to 55 
percent of the fur animals taken during recent years were dependent 
in some degree upon agricultural land for their most productive 
habitat. 

Information indicates that approximately 40 percent of the fur ani- 
mals harvested were taken on agricultural, and about 60 percent on 
nonagricultural, land. Furs produced on agricultural lands seem to 
be superior to those from other types of lands. However, in each 
class of pelts the lower grades are represented by the greatest num- 
bers. This is particularly true in the case of land and water fur 
animals, where muskrat pelts probably make up 75 percent of the 
total number of skins. The same situation exists, however, for all 
classes of pelts, with the exception of wilderness fur animals. It is 
probable that careful analysis would not materially change these con- 
clusions as to the importance of agricultural land in the production 
of wild furs. 

This would indicate that agricultural land is much less important 
in the production and harvest of fur animals than of game, probably 
because the marsh-dwelling muskrats, most of which are taken by 
professional trappers, make up a very large part of the annual take of 
fur animals. 


HUNTING AND TRAPPING OPPORTUNITIES PROVIDED BY AGRICULTURAL LANDS 


To appraise the importance of agricultural lands in providing 
hunting and trapping opportunities, ‘table 5 was prepared. It was 
necessary to subtract from the total land area of the United States 
certain lands that cannot be used for hunting or trapping, The only 
column for which authoritative statistics are not available is column 


32 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


6, dealing with farmstead protection. A footnote explains how these 
figures were determined. 

For the United States as a whole two figures are given in column | 
20 for the total potentially huntable area devoted to agriculture. | 
One indicates 73.36 percent, the other 87.65 percent. As no data were | 
available for private nonfarm grazing lands by States, it was neces- | 
sary to make this distinction. The latter figure is the more nearly 
correct of the two. | 

In an effort to give some indication of the hunting pressure in the | 
various States. columns 21 and 22 were added. 


ogg” ESF ‘LO 8h '8 OFO “G9 ‘T | 8%" £26 ‘CF | 08° 9¢8 “ES £9" SEF ‘CET QOSAOLSUG Is= alka: municah aaa ose eae a ame BuUlfOIeg YINog 
OM -oz'¢ £0Z ‘2% 1¢ 6 G06 ‘F9 Le PPS ‘ZT 16 'T 020 ‘ET 91 °8 628 ‘66 OSSECS9 hates econ lan ee een me eee aie ~- purest spoyy 
a SSL ‘EZI 00 ‘OT 092 ‘698 °% | 6h" ~ 968 ‘681 | 16 'T 9€8 ‘6FE 6% I6I ‘6&8 O8F 260680. [er ess eee eae aoe eon Buea Asuued 
08‘F- + OGL ‘986 ‘% | 69 'T 06€ ‘226 Ol: 019 ‘6S | 8h BES ‘F6Z ST" GOSSZOIA Sia NOSF sSSlel feiss animes tenner en ee ama Saesen ye UOSON() 
811 OTT ‘Fae 12k GL8 ‘661 ‘€ | 8T° PPP ‘8L | ¥6 1 | 808 °898 | OF 66S ‘F0Z OOIBOGSE ipso te ne has A ae es rere me aia BvuloYyelyO 
k 60° $89-'6 89 FI O6T ‘228° | SF" 9€0 ‘80T | 66°T POLAR ASE I&1 “F09 OUQREL OF OCA as Sie seneemenes a a eee ~-=Oorgo 
A 82° P68 ‘FSI UE Ge 060 ‘69F ‘TI | 12° 869 “C6 | 861 89E ‘OSe LY 96F ‘82 OCTG ni rai | Es oe ee eae PeRgRR ah “B1OAVC YWON 
Oe 6)" OF9 “CFZ G9 6 049 600‘ | 2° 060 ‘66 | L6° SPS ‘FOE £9" 66619615 = ts -O0SRCG Nm de ss se per ne veces Se aoe BUI[OIBD) YON 
H ee O18 ‘SE 1Z°8 GLE “GSO ‘Z| SE" 98z ‘OOT 9¢ 'T 88E ‘OLF 0% °% O18 ‘029 OSSRSO bayOGr ori <a ca tale ae sie: po pen mene --""yIOX MON 
1 <2 Lg°S -" -hpOL “S62S | GL" Ges “029 10° ZES ‘ES Cle P86 ‘$6 | 0° 90F “6 IROCOROVECL gre |S icant osana ine Mapnemena ear? ““OOIXOT, MON 
N 9%" 882 ‘ZI 91 6 829 ‘OFF 6¢° ZIG ‘8% c8 1 06 ‘88 oo 9 ZIT 662 ~=—s|_—« 096 ‘808 ‘F Ee eae ke Gee gee ees ---- 9SIOf MON 
S Tye 0&8 “6 69 'F GBF ‘99% 68" 06S ‘ZZ OFT OZI ‘FR 18° L6F ‘0G ORSEO LRGs: ces 5 teat che ee Grae oe se abaae allysduey, MON 
rH 18°F GIL Gar € | 80° OFF ‘GS c0° OST “6E FI 9GF ‘26 ZO" OL “TT Aerial Avian ec oean pearemamnG wearer ey ee ca BPBAON 
a a EPS ‘SIZ 80 “F OFZ ‘F00'% | 2" 886 ‘OIT LESTE OLT ‘ZP9 If" L6F ‘00 OGLIZGIE G¥is 7-2 oes pe oe ole ca wyatt eee BYSVIGON 
P 6% 986 61h GT | 18° OOF 892, | OL” 929 06 ee" GEO “ETE 10° 188 ‘$9 OV SEES SO ss |e. | eect a nie aan np Re aa vueyUO 
oo IT8 ‘29 0S 6 O18 ‘941 F | €8° OFE ‘OFT GL‘ BSE ‘89 SL" [Sh PPE OSCEG SERS Ras eies ete eee etna aie ate a ae >>> == TIMOSsT Ay 
A 6G” 06€ ‘98 1¢ ‘OL O€8 ‘OIL ‘E | 8° GGL “SE 06° PLT ‘L9G OF TL9 ‘LET OSQRIL ORO GM a eee i sits ee ee cea ere eet 1d dIsstsst [Ay 
A 66°9 BIF €9 "€ | 68'S ogg (108 | Ze" OFL ‘E91 rr 'T QEI ‘SPL Z9° 890 ‘828 UGGS) Goes ar al Fare oa area ner cca eae ge ec TS BJ OSOUUT AY 
< 02° 09¢ ‘TL 10°8 GGL L¥6 G | SP" 098 “2ST 19‘T 0ZE “6S 86° 196 ‘09 QUGSESU SOC aus teen eae By ee ie oy = me UBSIYOITN, 
GES 000 ‘T21 €% ‘OL OTF 96¢ 0g ° ZIG “GZ 81% 980 ‘ZIT 169 ggg “G¢E (OG Mae Gar eS Sees cee aes ex anaes cen clam S}JOSNYORssB INI 
Z 09° 186 “LE Ly OL O8T ‘999 1B O82 “LT go 'T PSL ‘86 09 'T CLL ‘TOT ORG EC Ci Oe a a san iis ct a ee eee a purl Ain yy 
S 02 °% SP ‘OZF 8% E G09 ‘829 | CS 266 ‘TF PL GGG ‘IFT 18° 188 ‘8 OOSICEL IOI tions sito g ake es fe os oe nine ee oUIv IAL 
ah oT £98 ‘668 98 °¢ O9T ZOL T | 28° 891 'F6 Tg" SLE LET 0g CTE ‘PFI QOL TOO G6 Cr SaaS Sa St he awinc pas soe ee one em are ~BUBISINO'T 
fo) GZ 000 “9 &% “OT OLP FLIP | 10° $92 ‘OL Ge 1 96F ‘LPE Whe 81Z ‘281 WAS SU Ge Ges tel Ine sini waren a Seem WS IA Sat ted Poo ~AYonquey 
=) £0 189 (LT 00 °¢ Ge8 819 Z | Ze" 0€6 ‘891 OLT OTF ‘888 BE PPT “261 Oe Chas Alas lee eee ete ORs Cambie a Sn eee Teo eC sesue yy 
Qa 20° 196 8 9€ 6 064 ‘668 8 | OG" 9G “OLT re % ZOE “TES L0°T LEL GLE ORORQUC SCC ra Boss ene ses cen ea ein aS wees BMOT 
o) 1G OZI ‘9% 90 “€1 GZS ‘C10 ‘E =| 8G" OTP “eeT ro % 941 ‘98S eh 1 GOL ‘O& OOSS S00 ESC ale ook a er re ee ce eS BuUvIpUy 
oye (AU) CTGsOM pee 172956 089 ‘69F “E | 19° PIG ‘SIZ 1% QLT ‘SOL OI % PIT ISL OCS EROS COs Snot ace ap 5) oa ke ara area sfoulltl 
alr Gg 9 691 F6F'E | LOT G69 ‘9L9 (1) 9F0 ‘€ 98° 89T ‘GOL Gl O19 ‘69 QOCSORSSEGE t5.s| ace ete ca mag ee ea ea oyepl 
0° 000 ‘FI 19°9 OFF ‘GOS ‘S| &Z" 9&0 ‘88 6G I FIO ‘PSF 99° 9F9 ‘OF] QOOS PSG LEO a coca ne ae et ee sate eer ees BISIOOL) 
eas MYDD 9G ‘ISLS | 20% OLS ‘822 Ge 82.6 ‘86 ico 016 ‘LOT ee" L8L ‘PIT OPO BUR GO see sera oie ie eo ee aise aes BPO 
=) Biaqars athe tee 8E “ZI CTL ‘SST (Aue 020 ‘F GL 1 PPO ‘2% 881 ELG “EZ O00; 2 CG lax se aes kor enh ones ee i ae IB MEO 
ey 8g" 960 ‘81 59 “ST GCE ‘Z8F OF* £9Z ‘ZI a6 99€ ‘F8 66% IFPI ‘26 OOSAESOS Goes |Recgsthn gs tcp oan oe aepeammeeen “qnoo0uu0g 
Q os OF9 '€28 '& | PPT 099 ‘“F96 CT" 9LF ‘O01 8h * OFZ ‘SIE 61° 86G ‘831 OGISI VERIO NO Nec rece cata eee eee ope10foD 
3 0¢ °% 267 G8h Z | 96% OOF SSZ 3 | ST" FL0 ‘TST 6F° CIE ‘88h 8e° GEL ‘Z8E OSG UTQG Gece Prt cone nce oe eae oe eee anes BIUIOJ[VO 
= 09° O89 206 | €o 2 OkT 089% | 20° 9¢9 “16 121 PP6 SOF i LZ6 ‘BST Q008OIO: Cosas eosin ng or aca ge ee oe ee sesuvyly 
= ers 019 66h Z| 68" 09E ‘Z8Z 90 ° 696 ‘PF (SEP 009 “96 60° 69¢ ‘TE QORESEREClatalas Ser he Se ne ae ee BuOZzIIV 
0€ ‘0 000 ‘OOT €&'8 OS¢ ‘PEL ‘Z | 080 982 “96 10'T 919 ‘GEE 0g 0 SPS ‘COT QOGRS ISCO MNase ag re a ee Ss oe i eg a ai vulegely 
a UIdLIg SILI JUIDLIg Sala WUIDLIT Sala UIDLIG. Salo QUIdDLIg Salo SILI 
Zs ee SS eit EN ee We oP di . sani HE ala i ere ae Si eed eat Spee ae RS. OPS 
(1) (9) (¢) (F) () (Z) (T) 
= aN GE6I ‘sSnsud. 
Gq SdSsNjol VUIVS 93819 | UOTJOoJ0I1d peojswIe AT vole AVMUSI sveole ueqiq [BIN}[NoTISe 
- -JO-SIYSII PvoIpIey ? 
ike oes Me Aq Rare 48 
pul [8407 
(stoeuUMO AQ poqsod spuv[ opnyjour you soop) Mey Aq poyqryoid st ZuWUNY o1fqnd yoryM uO seory oyeurxolddy 


1 PUD] [DANINIVIHY 07 UOIZD]A4 UL DAD aqnjuny fjQv1VUI}0 J —G ATAV J, 


CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


34 


6L‘LE |: 26 ‘FOL ‘F 
$9 FI RIL ‘662 ‘¢ 
696 61 ‘OST ‘Sg 


G0 ‘01 $29 ‘LLL ‘ES 
10 ‘ST 68% “69% “G 
BELT» | PSS ‘BIZ 
PE ZS GET ‘689 
£8 6 GE6 ‘O61 ‘9 
696 L88 ‘8b9 6 
29°01 06L ‘989 ‘E 
¥6 EE G12 ‘BIL ‘FS 
PS OL 929 ‘SSP ‘ 
JULI Salo 
| 
(€1) 


(‘ouy ‘ZI-€ “S[OD) 
BIG UOTONPo [BIO], 


SIE ‘E 


10° 
10° 121 
60° SOI ‘6S 
900 £68 ‘09 
UID SaLoOy 
(21) 
ueqin 


you ‘spur, AABN 


10° (006 % 
G0" 682 ‘81 
ZO" 690 ‘TI 
Me 290 ‘SOT 
60° 029 ‘FI 
80° 920 'T 
10° L80 ‘¥ 
pe" OPT ‘PEs 
ZO ° G8P ‘9 
80° £88 ‘09 
900 92 ‘0% 
1UDILI $adlo V 
(It) 


SUOTJVAIOSOI AUULTY 


OP £69 ‘OF ‘LP 
GT 'L OLE ‘TOF ‘Pb 
60 'T P98 ‘BOE 
oye LYS ‘021 
aL 9 OF0 ‘619 ‘2 
ct) P68 ‘Ih 
12° 880 ‘ZI 
Ly'P age ‘S98 % 
19 ‘I £62 669 ‘2 
G8 ‘¢ 029 ‘098 ‘T 
99° G06 ‘PZE 
7u ALI] $al90 V 
(2) 


SOSNJOL OUIVS 04849 


OLY O16 ‘608 ‘06 
GPS COE ‘79% 
8h 8 CCT ‘866% 
189 OLP LEO ‘I 
96% GIL ‘992 ‘I 
LO°L OE ‘926 ‘T 
66 °9 G16 ‘SOP 
88° CZF ‘OOF 
SPP Ggz ‘GTS ‘L 
9% ‘OI 08 ‘LEL ‘% 
Pg Z OPS ‘OPS “I 
1UddLIg Saloy 
(9) 


U01}90JO1 PBOISUIIE if 


16° ZL8 ‘L1G 
80° IPL ‘9% 
99° E89 ‘CEP 
Lg" BPS "BOG 
129% | 09 ‘880 ‘61 
pUaLaT | Saloy 
(OT) 

SUOL}BALOSOI UBIPUT 


90" 009 ‘ZI 
10° 000 *¢ 
1) ZPE ‘ER 
£0" O19 ‘ST 
OL’ E21 ‘O0E ‘TI 
gg ' £06 “99 
pL °% BOF ‘SZL‘Z 
10° 600 ‘I 
16 "I 890 ‘98h ‘TI 
200 000 ‘8 
PUIDLIET Salo VY 
(6) 


G0" O8ORS Ty) Di Ss ee 5 eee ane nas 
OL” TTA ds | a aR cleric Seam Tee ee 
98° 908 ‘068 Poe sab A ee 
(6 OLOV LP tats Gites a, eee aes 
96°. | 6PO ST PPcciges | cpa gine eee 
06 ° BLE LOT wo (al ligs oo hea e ae 
Bg” G80 O61. > “lists ease eee ore 
69 “1 LOSES Nap Butane oo eee See 
9100 0 OF ORS yo Ras ae ea eae 

Ula | saloy 

(8) 
po} BULutyo 

oSIMIOYYO JOU 

Sosnjol [BIOpd iT aqeig 


Buelpul 
sroury[y 
“OUBpT 
BIGIOOL) 
BPHOly 


ae petcieine WBAMBIOC 
eee ne ynorjoo0uu0,) 


~-OpBIO[O,) 
BIUIO}I[B) 
~~“ sesuByly 
~BUOZILY 

~- BUIBQBLY 


MG O89 ‘P90 'F 
G0° OPL ‘PE 
68° 860 ‘981 
LY £69 ‘TL 
€2 828 ‘66 
(dé, 886 ‘9G 
ee" 986 ‘61 
10° OST ‘6 
1° 9G “E61 
61° 962 ‘6F 
OT" 986 ‘OL 
JULIE] SaLayV 

(g) 

AGM 


-JO-SIYSUA PBOALTVYT 


£6" 800 L282 ‘21 | Zo" ChE ‘OPS ‘6 | 096 ‘9LT ‘806 ‘T 
6L" OLE ‘SIT G0" G9L ‘PE OGL ‘Oh “29 
IL ‘1 9¢9 *GO9 Z8 LIS ‘066 OPS BOE “SE 
G2 'T PPL ‘261 Die GOE ‘S11 O80 ‘PLE ‘ST 
61° PP ‘BEE 6g" 196 ‘991 OPO ‘SLL ‘GP 
$2 I RSE ‘OZE 6P° 998 ‘971 089 ‘LOL ‘Sz 
OFT P6P ‘SB 88° 00% ‘Te 09 ‘BE8 °G 
e1° O8P ‘OL ie L19 ‘68 092 ‘L69 ‘2S 
19° 089 ‘Tg0‘1 | 90° 828 ‘OLLI 029 ‘896 ‘LOT 
F0'T 00k ‘LZ gg" 089 ‘LPI 089 ‘629 ‘9% 
Lot SPP ‘OLL 61° 629 ‘£6 0° “S61 ‘6h 
1UIILI Saloy UdILIG Salo yy Salo py 
(p) (g) (2) 
| GEG ‘SuSuo0o 
BOIB ABMTLSIFT svole ueqiy [BIN ANoAse 
S0}BIG Popa y) 
; Aq BoB 


(souMO AQ pojsod spuB] opnpUl yOu Soop) MB AQ popqryord sy surUNyY orpqnd YoryA WO svoty 


POULIYUO)—) SPUD) DANPNILIGD OF WOYDIAL UL DALD APQDJUNY 


| puBy [BI04 
joyeurtxo1dd y 


04818 


Aqyviyuajogg—"G ATA J, 


soyB}g poyuy) 


BULULOA AY 
UISUOOST AA 

~ BIUTSITA 480 AA 
~~“ TOPSULYSB AA 
pens BIULSITA 


SES EXON) 
aaa ooSsouud f, 


ae BJOYBC WINS 


30 


UTILIZATION 


AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND 


GAME 


18 ‘ZI 6S “866 ‘FFZ! 20° £98 ‘88 80° GPS ‘OG ‘T OLS 926 ‘86 TE | 89° £66 ‘816 ‘ZI SF 
C8 ZI COE ‘FZ0 ‘8 120° 1F9 6 ZI EF ‘92 Cl 'T | 682 ‘612 | CP's LOF ‘EST ‘% GZ" 
#8 EI 606 ‘F68'F | £0" 80 ‘FI 6L 1 ZGL ‘6EF See Sea ae ya] 
80 OI 19¢‘0S¢ ‘T | 100° 102 ae Seo dte we sc eee See 
II ‘9 C0Z ‘268 ‘9 10° 828 ‘T Pie 128 ‘GL £0 'F 6ESEF ele sear 220 ‘OLE 80° 
10 IT ZLZ ‘ES8 ‘Z 80° IPL ‘61 el: TENE Cee se era tne 06° PLZ ‘GES 81° 
C6 6 890 ‘I8¢ app aes Ge: GREG ie |e een eens ig ee SEES anon heey ere 
19 6 168 ‘FSO ‘¢ 81° POF ‘16 90° 0S9 ‘8z LL 889 ‘999 ‘T | 98° C68 ‘161 aL" 
89-2 006 ‘106 ‘ZI | 00° 09 £0" LS ‘6h 100° 120 ‘€ SL" 000 ‘02z “I cO° 
LL ST 26S 800‘ | £00 ° 280 ‘I Se cites | ee SiC Re 6F6 ‘1Zz ¢0° 
€8 CT 1Z¢ ‘98L ‘2 £0" OZI “ET 08 6 828 ‘828 ‘F | 89° 616 ‘968 02° 
9¢ IT LIL ‘GGz % +0" 996 ‘9 Tees IST ‘2 Bk ee FEL 1 80° CPE ‘GT re" 
PG £2 G0 “COT 10° GOS G0" LOG ieee oe oa ae oe Ge 002 ‘% Eee Wee 
16 ‘ST Z9E “E8C ‘F 00° ne 80° IL8 ‘ZZ See to ee ; P1° 0S0 “6 eae 
68 ‘OT SII $999 Jo IPP 100° [10 'F 1¢°% Z6L ‘OLS ‘T | 82° 199 ‘691 68" 
6L°L1 OMG 296 Siem | teeters: | ened cies ia 029 ‘09 6F 9 GOI ‘T88‘% | 10° 88 ‘E 8° 
LP 61 689 “920 ‘S Pateiycs| teee ae 50° ECF ‘6 ere Be oes 00° 104 Bee ee 
PL ZI SCF “E71 ‘¢ P00 ° 9€8 ‘T 60 °L OTL ‘P81 ‘€ | ST’ E92 “G9 re" 
8L FI 226 ‘T19 ‘F 00° Z1 68° 89S ‘OZT 06° 11Z ‘89 19° C06 ‘OTZ OTT 
20 “€1 602 026 ‘€ 00° PU 80° SES “CZ af i gone ae Sih ae £0 ° 
1¢ 31 €2% “1S8 “6 Saeed OI" C68 ‘IZ1 oS 6Pr 6EL ‘9 | FS" 909 ‘O61 92° 
SF 81 628 ‘888 GO° 69% *% 1g’ Waal IE fae NR eet 20° 626 20° 
8c 2 CFI ‘S&F 00° CO lige Saat | beat Ber es lO 00g ‘¢ 

rE IT Z8E ‘016 ‘2 SI’ 99¢ ‘GZ ya ip ek eae SAS PORT Shr ‘6E0‘T | 00° €6¢ oo 'F 
26.9 LES. COP Gs alse cuumenaoses Pan ey ued | baO())s 8&0 ‘Ez FI’ L¥6 ‘19 10° OFZ “ 8S 
G8 “ZI HO OAD) PAE, eee TS OSS ace 10° OL ‘2 1-9 808 ‘F609 | FIT 028 ‘S90 ‘T ee T 
89 ZI OR OESUGEG 25 ee cnet ae |e gree mica 10° ZO ‘PF athe ea cine 90° 000 “Sz 1) 
If “21 O96 TSO GR | ere cee | emer ine ae: Scrat ton (0) 609 ‘% 00° 60F ‘T 90° 
12 ‘91 QGOF STS |e mabe win nce cites 00° €6¢ ‘Z PPT LG8 ‘GPL $0" 00 “0z €S 
6 11 COSEC6 Gaon eee cae eae (is OSF ‘ZI 70° C£9 ‘ET Gam 098 ‘SFT &S" 
62 ‘GS G20 ‘LPL ‘1 20° ay Or’ CORO b DA BERS ee Sie a Sor Tee exe 
60 91 186 “€20 ‘I 80° 1&z ‘¢ If 1 COVE Oe atl liueiae seen ete é1° 109 ‘8 ro ae 
169 10% “88 ‘I 00° 11Z 00° CGS Sy ae epee ache ata bee 91° 60F ‘08 90° 
02 6 18 19 % 00° SIZ 1) GEG ‘OE ps ares 00° 81 Ma 
90 61 129 ‘006 ‘F 5 oe fait © GES ‘OE : Pegs ae ro) 89 ‘SE ae se 
ao °L ZG9 “E96 '€ Lone ee lneCOi Z89 ‘FZ 10° 890 ‘SE Sara pf Re meee Wa x 
OF “SI OT O OVE we itn era |S S son as 10° L198 ‘F 10° ORF ‘E aes fe | ee Oar, lea 60° 


| 


| 109 891 
680 ‘19 


RLF PSI 6 


18S ‘ZE 
00 "Sy 


ELT ‘b9 
OTS ‘6L 
C80 ‘FI 
IFT ‘26 
$10 ‘29 


990 ‘9F¢ 
£86 ‘08 
L0Z ‘EST 
612 ‘T9E 
88 6 
ZIT ‘G0 
968 
COE ‘OT ‘E 
GLI 9ST 
GSS “CFS ‘T 
818 ‘GF 
CSL “LT 
1F8 ‘91 
C68 ‘G8 


ace ‘TI 
108 ‘11 
90% “PE 


ST Sys ae Be SA eT Pee “""T1OSULYSB MA 


~~ BIUIBILA 
~-quourldo A, 


SES tr Soe eee eae Ee ee ee eyoyVd YyNos 
---------------------------- BuljoIeD) YANO, 


b (Rents Paeon Gion mma pares ase pue[s] 9poyryy 
Seal Meee eee am pee ee IP rg RS op ee ~elueaA[ASuUod 


Aas nae es cake BI OFC GER ION, 
a eat iS ee py Ee na BUILOIB) Y4ION 


SS ASS oS & ea OOIXOP, MON 
oF See ee ar oS= sae esis gs nn aie ~XOSIOL MON 
BN fi ae pe St Oe ake dlTysdulvyy MON 


Sit tk Ry 2 eat re os Rm ote ate Id dISSISSTJAL 


Se ee ara sjyosnyoesse fy 
“puepAle yyy 


~ U0801Q 
vuLoye LAO 
Se ©) 


yIOX MON 


~-- BpBAoN 
“BYySBIqoN 
~BURIUO TAL 
~~ LIMOSST J, 


BIOSOUUL IL 
—UBSTYOTAL 


_ Surv] 
~ BUBISINO'T 


Dette pel ee ee Re ee pe ne cee ee Ayonj uo yy 


CIRCULAR 636, U. 8S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


36 


£29 86L ‘69 PZ 06 | P28 ‘986 ‘E 
Ig O89 ‘80h | €9°06 | 209 ‘00 ‘61 
LLP ‘T BPS ‘9% 18°66 | 289 ‘OZT ‘6E 
PPS OPS ‘80E | 89°89 | Le9 ‘926 ‘OT 
LY z00 ‘69¢ | £09 | 998 ‘ORO ‘OT 
821 ‘E 988 ‘8T Gr 26 | 120 ‘928 ‘9 
ve [89 OIT | 69°28 | O8b ‘eb 'T 
66 688 ‘eo | POPE | SBT ‘098 ‘T 
POL‘TT | ate ‘¢ 89°92 | 029 ‘991 ‘LP 
BEE 068 ‘6EL | 00°OOT! 622 ‘E92 ‘CP 
6LL bag ‘POL 88 92 | 98% “£99 ‘9 
OG8 126 ‘PP 68°08 | 2&2 ‘228 ‘OE 
19¢ LG0 ‘b p99 | E8G ‘RES ‘OT 
GIZ 0&2 ‘10% | 12°89 | I8€ ‘OLL ‘62 
19 889 ‘F8b | 88°Lh | LOL ‘ZS “CT 
6¢ G86 ‘19 GL TP | £08 ‘699 ‘T 
68 G12 ‘09 69°69 | TOP ‘LIL ‘e 
PLT Lepr ‘ZOl | 00°¢% | LE% ‘60 ‘F 
G09 99 ‘Sb Ele | SZl ‘SPL ‘8 
69% 6h ‘0 86 °6L | OF0'PZS ‘OT 
192 p99 ‘89 | ZB 'S6 | G6 ‘06E ‘oh 
£02 Ze ‘IST | 00°O0T| P28 ‘808 ‘OF 
gg 884 ‘9GE | 18°26 | 02% ‘908 ‘LI 
VII 792 ‘892 | 80°26 | GZS “16L ‘8% 
808 B99 “69 PIL 'L9 | 999 198 ‘SE 
I8P v2 ‘OL eh 19 | Z8S “96L ‘2% 
969 EPS ‘Bb €8°LT | 968 ‘61g ‘e 
88 028 ‘TI 89 °EL | 988 “GOL 
68 1Z0 ‘12 69°99 | 8L¢ ‘269 ‘T 
GEL PES ‘18 ZZ 08 | She ‘GGz ‘8b 
OLD GZI ‘681 | 18 ‘Lh | 802 ‘S10 ‘er 
108 O6P ‘LE 99°09 | 26h 11% ‘SI 
Oe ‘% 9LL ‘0% LL’SL | @8P G06 ‘LE 
LLE GG8 ‘LL G9"LG | 82z 926 ‘OT 
Sug | Laquinay | wad SILI 
“LIT 
(22) (12) (02) 
OSUOdI| 
tod oun 
BOL oor -[NOLIS O47 POJOA 
9[qv GeOr “Op BOL o1qeyuny 
JONSST 
-juny iene [erjyuojpod — jRyog, 
ee Ssuljun yy 
po eur ais 


af S| 


BS el Tela eo oe he 
72 ie 78 ca es (EA 
SL ‘HT | 981 ‘860 ‘OL) 8691 | ZO ‘09 ‘TT | 29° 
; f [8 29 | 092 ‘GPT ‘6E | STL 
OCR eS CP on LOO Mn tsee sets tae 
90'F | OF2‘908'E | FO'L | OLB "PELE | Bh'8 
IT‘) | OFF ‘626 'T | 96°13 | 988 ‘E89 ‘OT | €8 "12 
MOP POO se eee Ella ak 
LE | ShZ‘OLG% | OF ZT | OBE ‘69h 'L | OF ‘ST 
£0° | 000 *S2 oho | PST 348 h | POTT 
PEST | 000 F8E LZ | G9'ET | 6FZ ‘029 9 | SE Te 
JUd0d SILI Ty) SALI JWdd 
OT aia fl Id 
(6D (81) 
(ed VUOUL 


-OTUNUT PUB OYRIS 


-VIVdOC, LOLopUy] 


618 ‘268 °L_ phast 


186 ‘LP ‘P 
OPE “161 
89% ‘B08 ‘9 | 


906/619 OT = 7s 


G96 ‘10% 6 
696 ‘G86 “6 


£20 G92 ‘OI 


SaLoy uaa 


LO] 


DDIALOG 480.10 Jf 


PO “8S 
£9 06 


G66 VEL SE | 12 


a.) 


ZOE ‘OF0 BL | £9 08 


O9Z ‘66h ‘98 
116 ‘966 ‘02 


90°96 | 9F0 ‘6b9 LE | 9%°L8 | 299 ‘S61 ‘6 
Fry ae 89°9 | 289 ‘926 ‘OT | 2 °E8 | 829 ‘TRE ‘92 
eee eo: eb 09 | 998 ‘O80 ‘9T | 86°98 | TER ‘22g ‘92 
Sawies aay 16 6F | OL9'OLL ‘EE | EF °L8 | 2469 ‘OSE ‘89 
erg aces 69°28 | G8P‘SLh‘T | 22°18 | Tel ‘0z6‘e 
Wows tare b9 PE | ESI ‘OG8‘T | Zb'%6 | S69 ‘THE ‘¢ 
RG gk ae LG | 628 ‘999 ‘S | 99°88 | BGR ‘PIE ‘ZO 
Sake. 80°96 | P88 ‘096 ‘Eh | 80°6 | 62% ‘E92 ‘oP 
eh Sich 98°29 | SOP E92 OF | GSI‘2Z8 | 6ZE ‘OG ‘T8 
eas 68°08 | ZEL ‘228 ‘08 | ZE°L8 | OF9 ‘BOP ‘8E 
Sake See b9'E9 | S8E ‘RES ‘OT | 6°18 | OZ2 ‘6R6 ‘Sz 
Seta seme 1Z°89 | [88 ‘022 ‘6% | €2°E8 | OeP ‘ORE ‘EP 
Wise 88 LP | LOL ‘GIS ‘eT | 90°88 | 869 ‘PE ‘Ze 
Be eae PON GL'Ty | POE ‘699 ‘1 IL LL | 986 ‘266 ‘¢ 
pepe Gages 69°69 | TOP “LIL ‘S 16 €8 | 60€ ‘SEE ‘g 
Soles aa 00 °€% | LEZ ‘860 “F £086 | £69 ‘662 ‘LI 
Pet heae a “LS | 83 ‘PL 08 06 | 606 ‘88E ‘92 
Reg 23 goles 8E'6L | OFO 2G P6'O8 | 61Z ‘S18 ‘0z% 
ioaes a 28 'E6 | SE6 ‘06E CP 'Z6 | SOL ‘18S ‘SP 
Dye 00 OOL} P28 ‘808 09 '98 | P28 ‘808 ‘OF 
ake Det 18°26 | 02% ‘90¢ IZ ZR | 898 ‘E96 ‘81 
ASE See Te 80°26 | G29 T61 9€ G8 | ZO8 “L19 ‘OF 
PZ GE | 996 PLZ GE "06 | TL ‘961 ‘8h 
Zr '29 | Z80 ‘162 G6 68 | OLE ‘908 ‘EE 
oe saan €8 "LT | 968 ‘6Ie 66 °P8 | 108 ‘LPS ‘62 
Teaes aw aes 89 'EL | 989 ‘GOL 29 ZS | YbO 6EO‘T 
eae a ae ee 69°99 | 8249 ‘269 ‘T | 99°LL°| 8h9 ‘G68 ‘2 
Co ames GZ 8h | ZI8 20 ‘6% | 29°06 | SRT ‘OST ‘09 
eee RTES GE TE | G69 ‘SL ‘8% | 1E'06 | L6E ‘896 68 
$e err 99 0S | L6P‘T1% ‘ST | €€°68 | 01% 620 ‘OE 
Fe fee ce GG ‘8% | OST 9EL ‘ET | 90°99 | LOL ‘BIT ‘8h 
TOES ee L G9 "LG | 84% ‘926 ‘OT | 9F'68 | FE6 ‘6SE ‘62% 
Salo y 2Wao SIL jwao SOL 
“LIT ~LI¢] 
(91) (¢1) (v1) 
pozvas puvyl wey 
ULIBJUOU OFPBALL pouMo Ajo BAI ({v04) 
Svole orqeyuny 


[eluejod po CULL} ss] 


PONULPUOD)-—, SPUD] PDANYNAMD OF WOLD JIL UA DIAD OPQDIUNY MDW JO] AUNT, 


BULOYRL AO 
a (6) 


BIOYVC, YWWON 


BUTLOIB,) YON 


YyIOX MON 

~~ OOIXOTA, MON 
~  AOSdO[) MON 
OILTYSAULB ET MON 
; "> -BDBAON 
~-BYSBIGON 


BUBYLLO[\ 
LINLOSSI JAY 
LACISSISSI [A 
BIOSOUUL [AY 
UBSIYOLIA 


S}POSNLBSSB [AY 


puBlAIe [AY 
~ OULRIA 
BURISINO'T] 


~~ Ayonyuoy 


sesue y 

UMOT 
BuUBIpU] 
“StOUNIT] 
[“OUBpT 
~ BI6LOOF) 
~ BPlOf yy 
~OIBMBLOC 


~~ ~9noLpoouuo , +) 


> OPBAO[O,) 
BIULOJILR,) 
sesuryly 
~~ Beuozily 
BULB RLY 


oyRIS 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 


e 
Surddyp{9aAo oy} ItaYM Souo ATUO a} 91vV S19qy}O 9g} JO AUL UvYy} SuAIey Ul 
23R19 9} UL PUL, oY) JO o8v2IUVdJod Jo} VAIS BV OALY TOTYM JO YIOG “BYSVIGON 
puv BMOT ‘IOAOMOFT ‘S}LOdaI UL dep1oAO SUIABJ UL pULT PUL Speol UL PURT 
‘uroySAS AOVAINS AB[NSUBJDII OY] AQ JNO PIR VOM SUIIVJ Of} OOM 89}vIS ot} 


I1l@ Ul ‘“BysviqoN pue BMOT Suljdsoxe ‘9 UuIN[OD UL WOT}00}J01d pBojSULIV 
SNUIW ‘snSUdD WNI[MOUSsy CGEEl UL UeATs Sv suey ul purt ITV (GT) 
= 7 ‘CT UWN[OD UL vIVp SnuruUt *Z UUINTOD UT BIR (FT) 


‘Z WUIN{Od 
JSUIVSY PoINSY st UUIN][OD SITY} JO ssvjUsOIed sy, “APLLOY}Ne v[qupUedosp 10 
sj10dea poysttqnd Aq poJVlZUBISQNS 91B PIJSI[ SoInso]D [[B “TaAVMOF = ‘oPEND 
-OPLUL 0B GL UNTO. UT v]VeVp oy} JBY} UMOUY Sf IT ‘Sesodand [BVUOT}BI1De1 
IOJ O[GVILVAVUN SNYy} puULl JO JUNOUTE VY} UO S9}BI_G POUL) 9} AOJ o[GV[IVaV 
a1 SoInsy OU ‘IOAVMOFT ‘SSvdse1} OTTGNd 0} PasopD oAIB “YQAIOT OS pUB ‘Spoys 
-19]}WM SV Yous ‘Soturduros a9sMod Aq po[[oOrtjUOD SpuR, ‘Spur, pouMo AT[VdT 
-oluntu AUByY ‘“SuTUNyY orpqnd 0} peso ATe}JIUYep BIL [BIO} VY} JO 0}FVUITISI 
UB ST pUB ‘VAISNPOUL ‘ZE 0} E SUUINTOA UL pepsodoed SpuUkT [TB Jo wNg (ET) 
‘yuowy..edoqd AABN 
JO [O1]UOD AAPUN 9}vISO [BIL PYUMO-[RJopo,y “JUEUTpILdeqd AACN “§ “1 (ZT) 
‘Bole AB[MOTZAVd AUB WO 
quepuvUIUTOD vy} Aq speuU oq ABUT SUOT}Adadxo Jnq ‘peyqryord st suuny orpqnd 
‘orod [eroues & SY ‘“OE6L ‘FT ANE ‘suotssessod iBpnsul pue “erquIn[o) jo 
JOLUSTIC, ‘9}BIG YOR UL BoIV SULMOYS SoTqB} ‘JUoUT}IVdEd AVAL “S “1 (TT) 
“SUBIPUTL OY} OJ Surddvsy pUB SUTIPUNY PodALoSad Sol}VaLy, 
‘Q2GL ‘LT ‘PO Jo SB SUOTVAJOSAI URIPU. UO (TVqIIy PUB podzJOT[B) Spur 
PoLASot JO SVIIB SUIMOYS SoTqe} ‘1OL1oJUT oY}. JO JUSUTZIvdIG “§ “ (OT) 
‘S710da01 
Aavjuowelddus puew ‘peer ‘9 “Ady ‘oolAdog yIRq [BVUOT}VN oY} AQ pPot}ST 
-UTUIpe ‘StatV JO SoTqRy, UOTPBULIOJUT ‘1O0L19}UT oy} JO JuoWZAIvdIq “S “DA (6) 
‘OSG6L JO SB Spuxl Jsea0J UO 
SosnJod [VAIPIT 0} SUTPLJOL DITAIVG JSe10q IY} WOIJ SoINsYy o1B OS[TBR pepnpouy 
‘yzaodey parrog sSvoinosesy [eVuoleN ‘x]T yd jo ‘TT ‘d ‘ge ov[qv} pue ‘oT ‘d 
‘e a[qv} UL pojJOU o19M SB ‘AoAING oY} JO UOTIpstinf vy} topun Jou sosnyjor 


IOJ ATAV[NOYARd ‘opvVuUul o1IM SUOTIIPPV ULV}1900 “TVAVMOFL “LEGL ‘TS ‘BIN Jo 
SV Sj10det AVAING [BLSO[OIG Woda, ATLIvUtId UsyB}] 1B SoANsSYy sso (8) 
“(9S6T) 
AULLOYINV oY} Sulog AvTYO VY “YUBA ‘SLOUTT[[ UL SoInsy JOJ posn SBA JI0do1 
porvdeid Apo VAIId YW “O9EGL 10 EEGL OJ otOM Sodnsy oY} poptaorid ‘Teuy 
SB UdIYV} VIV SJALOdVA ose} V[QV[IVAB VIOYA PUB ‘SOSNJoal 0}VIG UL Sasvo1dVB 


[810} VY} PeISTL SeyVI_ sUIOS UL SjueUAvdop oUIBS oY} JO S}10deI [VNUUR oT, 


‘pesn d1B SdINsY YONS PUB VB[GBILVAB YSTMIIY}IO SVM UVY} 9} Vp 19}eT Youw 
JO S9}BIG JO JoquUINU BV IOJ UOTPVUTIOJUL PoTTddns O9&GL puv GEGL A0JF sqyAodoy 
pivog SuluUuv[d 9}8}Q ‘vdAINOS JayJO AUR UL PUY prnod 9M Uey) sosnyjor 
9}¥I9 UL VSVIIDV 19} BOIS BV PdJIOdEI IDIAIOG JS010,.J VY} YOLYM UL SoSvO UT ATUO 
Posn V19M BOT, ‘“SasnJot 9}vIG JO [BIO] oY} SV PYUINSSV IIB SoINsSYy ULB}.100 
‘OSG ‘VOLAMOG JSOIOY ‘UOTSTAIG: SUIZeIy ‘WORE “FY UYor Aq JAodoar poystpqnd 
-UNn UB UL ‘SpuULT JSVLOF UO SVSNJol 9}BIG JO SLoqUINU Y[QvAIopIsSuOD s}.10doI1 
DLAI JSOIOY OY} UOLJIPPV UL “WUINTOS SITY} UL papnfouUl o1B VS9q} JO ULLII00 
pue ‘sojejJg AUBUL OJ So}PVUITYSA TEGL SeATs ‘TT ‘d ‘XJ ‘JOA ‘jaodey paevog 
S9INOSdY [VUOIIVN oy, ‘SodtMos JO AJOTAVA VB ULOAT 9IB SoINSY osouy (21) 
‘97819 YORI UL BIIY UOT}I0}01d PvVOISUTIVI [V}O} VY} VUTULIe}Op OF 
SnSsudD [BIN}[MOLISY GE6L ey} UL UMOYS S¥B So}BIG VATJOVdSoI VY] UT SuTTeS JO 
Jaquinu vy AQ Pol[d[NU d19M SIsVIIOV SNOLIVA VSO, ‘“acIVl YONUT ‘[V.10 
-U0S UL ‘918 Spve}SULIB] VY) SB So}VIg JoqIO [[V UL SUTJUNY 0} PosopO oq P[NOA 
ULIV], 1od Saloe GL o[IYM ‘BIUISITA JSAM PUB ‘BIUTSITA ‘ooSsoUUaT, ‘RUILOTRD 
YNoK ‘BVUIpOIVD YQAON ‘IddISSISSIY ‘BVUBISINOT ‘BIs100%) ‘VPLIOLW ‘SBSuURyIVy 
‘BULeqe[y UL SUTQJUNY 0} PasoTD oq P[NOM Waves Jod satoV OT ATWO VY} pe} VU 
-I]8S9 SBA JT ‘So}VIG ULIYINOG AUKUL UT SULIBJ POUYop-SNSuV) VY} JO osR}UddI0d 
oSIvT B UO MOJ VIB SSUIP[Ing Yons Jey} JoRJ oY} JO vsneovgq = ‘SsurplimMad 
Petdndoso0 Jo SvoURYSIP peyloeds UIYJIM SULIvaIG JO os1vYOSIpP vy} 10 sutjuNnt, 
SUqtyord 9}¥1g Yorg : SISeq SUIMOT[OJ BY} UO SIOY Ne 9G} AQ po}VUTTIS| (9) 
‘BL UP PeIl[SI] 
-qndun ‘sormouoog [WInjpMoLIsy JO neaing ‘Ieyed “WO (Gg) pur “(F) ‘(g) 
“BI(UIN[O_ JO JOLIISICT SOPNPOU! [VIOT, “EEG ‘SNSUGD [BAIN}J[NOLISV "Gg “A (Z) 
: SMO[[OJ SB ST SUUINTOD psloquInU UL B{Vp JO VdAINO 7 


LLZ P18 ‘G86 ‘G ee a Bee Sv eae 12% | 066 ‘099 ‘2¢| ¢0'8 | eer ‘E21 ‘egt] 86°F | GOT ‘seo ‘z8| 6z FI | 000 ‘000 ‘2ez| 80'°8S | ZL ‘OST E96] ET LS | IZP ‘SLT ‘8g9 ‘T|-SoIeIg pozUQ 

£29 ‘S £99 ‘02 9¢ 68 | 916 ‘202 ‘8h COSC! 1 LCONGZON ET GSEhS | POO WLIGaGls|| Slade | GSonSeGur. usa se onal eecmar nn. 82 IS | 909 ‘668 ‘2% | ST °28 | SIF ‘90R FG | SUTUIOA AA 
ST OSE OOZ 2) GTZ ON |S SHOE MOP e OG ee seat sy eats asa eect cy acne nee eye | ee | erence ca | mean coe «| ieee CT “29 | SFO ‘TOF ‘OZ | 9198 | 1e9‘69F ‘0G | UISUOOST A 
18 29 ‘TLT | 69°09 | S81 ‘9ZE‘°8 = J Sitrehaen een uae ear ee ie re onl Pete Ucar beta rary ay en rarer eet 6609 | S8T ‘928 ‘8 | 26°68 | SIZ ‘E28 ‘El | BIUISITA 4S0 
FOG ZSE ‘O9T | OS 8h | 992 ‘COF‘LT OPE ell MHP lec on |fromee wee oe OGEGH |: OO TCp ses aaa | iene cena eee ge ‘2 | c8e ‘FIP ‘EL | 68°88 | SE8‘ess ‘ce | TO7SUTYSB MA 
£91 OCSSOTE wal ESO SOs SLO 800 Cie: Saipan eee een |e meee Ss | Seebics eae ce Led anny ee ee Sea Se eee ibe peg lee ema nie 8E ‘89 | BL ‘899 ‘ST | 6°88 | 80F NOES Ie BIUISIT A 
IIT €S¢ ‘LF OT6OH IEP LEOED Coke lamenen ean Rae Ber a el cee ON te ae Eliseo see | Garaeale wee dae nga E ITO Om Cy, OC Onc ial CO" OO mI COGRSUG, Cys cam lige tatu JUOULIO A 
GEO ‘T 616 ‘GF OULOL AIP CLT SIO SCG alse cane ee a rah I AEA A? Atal (HG ASE a CONC as G) ee fhe coe ane GTZ | £68 ‘822 ‘¢ | 68°06 | S98 ‘Sho ‘2Zh | ye 
ISl % 060 ‘G2 11°¢8 | PLL ‘990 ‘ZEL | 8SZ'T | OF9‘F8BT} 7 | Wea | ae | aye eae eg oy | ieee ese 68 €8 | PET ‘Z80 ‘OLT| 28°26 | O79 ‘T9O ‘EST | ~~ > SBxO\L 
99 OLT ‘6S AZ EOS Oe elite le Ramee |e sans ae ee ea aes LSP Raa ee Rel a EES PP GL | 200 ‘8Fe ‘OT | 2°18 | 880‘TZ9‘TS =| dossouud, |, 
6S 80 ‘FL $2 G6 | PCI ‘LEP ‘6E APD) |) AGUS ED). he G66 | PES BIG Te Peer ae 8¢ 98 | 928 ‘7E8 ‘CE | LIPS | 666 ‘80 ‘IF ~ByoyRBd YING 
922 OLE ‘OL F819 | 816 29 ‘OT Bin Biel owe nie eee eengal eee bres Ree as Sere sooo Sony eee iia cits “--"| $8°19 | 816 ‘P29 ‘OL | PF 'S8 | E80 ‘19S “ZT BUI[OIB,) YANOS 
G9 126 ‘2 CGROP I OLSEGRGME a lain eee SPS Sot eeeinee Ye Se ti Gas ia eee eae ge all ee er ea lha as Seg NOUR €6 OF | 028 ‘ZZ 9A GL | LLE “LTS ~---puejsy opoyy 
6E 899 “P19 98 SS | $80 986 ‘ZI | 7 Beer z MUP hae ee ee SS a MRE a 98 e¢ | €80 ‘986 ‘ZI | £0 'FS | SIL 6OT ‘Fz ~— BluBATASUUe 
PEs OPE ‘G9 06°19 | 188 $20 LE (EG 6EL 1SL 98% | 18% ‘PEL ‘ZI | 22ST | 20% ‘EES igs seal ons Seen ata GO 0S | BSL ‘G8E ‘Ol | TL’68 | ZOE ‘PeS FS | W03010 


LTURE 


CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICU 


8 


YD 


‘PONSSEL ISUDOTT 
od aSvo1ov Josivy Yonul Suravy sozejg oy} Jo AULUT UY}? OSUedT] 10d oUIeS 
OLOUL OARTT POSSE oOSUOdT] od oSvo.19vt MOL ATOA ILM SoVRIG AUB “AOPUNY 
dod owes JO 10] voTIpUL 100d B SI AoJUNY 0d Satoe VVYQ JoORF oy? oVVId9Idde 07 
yuezodtr Stay “~Z uNy[OO UL BYBp Aq poplatp ‘Z UUTNTOA UL BIL (ZZ) 

‘PONSSL SOSUBDIT SUTJUNY JO coquinu vy} Aq pe BoIpUI 

UBT 9YVIG YoRvs UL surjuny o[dood o210ul 018 OO] JQNOP ON ‘surddeaz a0y 10 

SuUIYSY 1OJ ATUO SOSUVOIT Afoy SUISN ‘QunYy JOU AVUT S.Opl[OY, oSUsdTT VULOS UOS 

“Vol SIG} JO “SUOTJRUIQUIOD BIB SoSUVdDIT ISOq} JO AUB ‘OSTY ‘“AVULIvVy oq} 

Aq potdnoos0 10 pouMO puR, oy} UO JUNY Uv ‘djey poary seyVIg Auvur uL pur 

‘A[IUIVY SITY JO SLoquoul “TouLIey oy} Surpnypour ‘pury oeVarid jo.sjyuednsvo0 pur 

SHOUM(Q), “9JVIG BV UT SfoJUNY JO AoquInuU oy, MOYS Alo VANDIB JOU Seop poensst 
Sosuesdl, suljunyg Jo dJoquinu og} puB sjrodoey oivV}g WoT pojndurog (TZ) 
‘OATSHPOUL “GT 0} GT Suumnpoos Jo uns oy (0Z) 

“JUROYLUSISUL 018 SOSOdind 

SUIZBAS OJ PoSvoyT Spury yey} ‘AjTourvu ‘gp puew yy SuurNjOS UT 9SRd. oY} 9q 04 

poaord sv ‘oouRISUL SIY}] UL onay ploy pINOM suUTIVS dT} UIPLiou YIportpuny 


‘TIA 
‘ON JAOdoY pavog saoimosoy peuOIeN Aavjuowo[ddns oy} worl UoyR} O1OAN 


-9U0 94} JO JS¥vO S9zRIg [Te ATTwoTOVAd Ut Jey) ‘T9AVMOY ‘oTqeqoad st IT 


pesn vsogL “UuIN[OO STG} OJ o[QRILVAV oJOM LYRP AIVJUSUTSRIY AJUQ (GT) 
“QITAIIG 
BUIZBAIX, JO 1OJOIIIC, AouIAOJ ‘aojuodavy “zw Aq BVp peysiTqndun pur ‘e osed 
“DE6T Arvnuee ‘ulje[[ng suizery syq,y ‘1OT1e}UT vy} JO JuUOUTARdVq “GS “f) (RT) 
“pos Leyo 
voy OU Jnq pe}}tuted VIB YOOJSOATLT YOIYM UO SvorB ephypouL Jou Op pur 
S[BNPIAIPUL 0} posvol AToOJPTUYOP oA SPYSLA SUIZvAS YOM UO VSO} olk Posn 


asvoIOv OY, ‘SoeTqeV] poysrpqndun ‘sdtaAdoeg JSeqoyy JO ‘uOJPVTT “FY UYOL (LT) 
"S91RIS poJUL oY} 1OJ [RIO} VYI UL popnyzouUT ‘a10JoIOGI ‘SUA IT 


‘UOLJVAVPISUOD JNOYILAM SSIUISIP 0} YONUE 00} PoTOPISUOD SBA S919B YOO OOO 
“LES JO [k}0} OUT, ‘S0}VIG poHUs) PY} AOJ [U}O} VB SOATS “LEGT ABI ‘SopVIS 
pojluy), 9} UL UOTVeZITY puvy pur soinjpeay Teorssyg jo Aavuruing orydearry 
V JO pF “d UO ‘TOAVMOFT ‘SOIRIG AQ O[GVITVAB ST UOT, RUTLOJUT ON (OT) 


‘SULIR] UL PULT JO JNO UoyRy 


SBM SSVOXO VY} SoOIBVIG Z VS9Y} UL ‘“vaIR pu], UI puLy, JO SSooxe UL SoSnRd 


| 


| 


| 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 39 


PROBLEMS IN PRODUCTION 


LIMITED PRODUCTIVITY 


The inherent antipathy of most wild creatures toward crowding is 
probably the most important of the many and diversified factors bear- 
ing on the production of game and wild fur on agricultural lands and 
should be taken into account, when money returns to the landowner 
are being considered. 

There are isolated instances of farm- game species reaching a pro- 
duction peak approximating 1 unit per acre under optimum condi- 
tions. Even under such conditions not more than half of the game 
and wild-fur animals present at the beginning of the fall hunting 
season can be safely harvested annually. “When | populations are below 
the optimum, the percentage of kill must be still lower if existence of 
the species is not to be jeopardized. 

Areas of the high productivity indicated are considered to have 
game concentrations and are relatively small in extent, seldom if ever 
equaling a county in size. Furthermore, they are the exception and 
not the rule. 

The kinds and quantity of wildlife that can be produced on the 
various soil types and in the different climatic zones vary, as do agri- 
cultural crops. In general, it follows that the potentialities for wild- 


life production parallel farm-crop possibilities so far as they are 


determined by natural conditions. Quantity production, however, is 
not so easily achieved as in the case of domestic plants and animals. 

The quantity of wildlife harvested annually within a State may be 
ilustrated by data compiled for Pennsylvania. The information on 
game killed in Pennsylvania for 1937 and 1938, shown in table 6, was 
obtained from Pennsylvania Game News.® 


TABLE 6.—Game killed in Pennsylwania, 1937 and 1938 


Season of | Season of 


Season of | Season of 
Game 1937 1938 Game 1937 1938 

Deer, legal males____._______- 39, 347 Closed || Ring-necked pheasants-_-__-_-___ 371, 526 511, 132 
Deer, antlerless_______________ Closed 169 986i] .@ alles SSNS Se eee ee 105, 795 109, 030 
SGPT as eae 1 ee igee 537 381q | Shore:birdsS= 225 222 se 12, 657 8, 656 
Rabbits, cottontails__________ 3, 074, 820 | 4,222,659 || Wild ducks and geese________- 16, 758 2237 
Hares, snowshoe or varying__|_ | 2,420 POS 20 ne Blackbird Sax sas eae et ae 78. 543 78, 078 
REACCOQUS ete sates encllsed 71 29, 842 352790 cl Wi000 CoCKSs2. 222 57, 244 49, 857 
BPSEUIEEC lsrsee sete tee Soe 1, 056, 408 | 1,097,660 || Woodchucks_-__-____..-_---__- (2) | 145, 163 
Mnldctunkeys: 2228) se 6,619 6, 722 SU EEEEEnEEnnen EEE 
ied Perouse. 2.2 177, 683 222, 863 Total, all species________|5, 030, 199 | 6, 681, 328 


| 
| 
| t 


) For this species it was necessary to use the Field Officers’ estimates only. 
2 No report obtained prior to 1938 season. 


Pennsylvania is recognized by sportsmen as one of the better game- 
producing States of the eastern seaboard. There are more than 28,690,- 
000 acres in Pennsylvania; thus, in 1937 the State average was | unit of 
game taken for each 5.7 acres, and in 1938, one unit of game for each 
4.3 acres. The 55 percent of the State in farms produces by far the 
greatest proportion of the game killed. Cottontail rabbits, pheasants, 
and quail are undoubtedly bred and harvested chiefly on farmlands. 


§ Pennsylvania Game News, September 1939, p. 31. 


40 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


Some of the other species reported also are associated with agriculture: 
to some degree. This indicates that the higher valued agricultural, 
land produced more than the State average but that the lower valued| 
land, such as might be considered economically feasible to own and 
manage for the production of game, produced far less. 

As Pennsylvania i is in a fairly humid part of the United States, it 
produces more units of game per acre than many other sections of the 
country. Information on the annual kill is not available for all re-| 
gions; therefore, the best that can be conjectured at this time is that the 
Pennsylvania harvest of wildlife is equal to or above the average for | 
the country as a whole. 


FIGURE 11.—There is no ground cover or possibility of forest reproduction in an 
overgrazed woodlot. Practices like these destroy timber, soil, and wildlife, 
leaving nothing for future generations. 


CONFLICTS WITH CROP PRODUCTION 


Recommended practices of game production are not always in 
harmony with established farm ] practices. Providing food and cover 
for wildlife requires that vegetative growth be available as to the 
birds and mammals at all times of the year, yet farm practice fre- 
quently dictates clean cultivation. (See figs. 3 and 4.) 

Recommendations in the interest of wildlife advocate leaving the 
less productive parts of the farm to grow up to brush and weeds. The 
use of hedgerows instead of more modern forms of fences, also of ad- 

rantage to wildlife, is sometimes uneconomical and may involve cer- 
tain hazards. Although some lands do not lend themselves to intensive 
use without becoming subject to loss of soil fertility or erosion, the 
fact remains that farmers strive to get maximum returns from their 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION A] 


vlands. This frequently induces clean cultivation and the fullest use of 
arable and pasture lands, sometimes to the detriment of wildlife habitat 
and soil. (See figs. 5-12.) 

| The management and handling of farm crops at times conflicts with 
tthe production of game. This is exemplified by the destruction of 
pheasant nests in alfalfa fields. The ring-necked pheasant shows a de- 
cided preference for this type of nesting site. Frequently the date of 
first mowing occurs a week to 10 days before the time the egos would 
hatch. The destruction of nests has been known to exceed 50 percent. 
\ ‘Many setting hens are killed. 


Figure 12.—A well-managed woodlot is a good public and private investment. 
It provides soil protection, an excellent wildlife habitat, and a permanent 
supply of woodland products. 


_ Certain species of game birds and animals sometimes damage farm 
crops; the more abundant they are the more pronounced their depre- 
dations. Farmers are not lkely to encourage these species (figs. 
/8 and 9). 

The direct or indirect transmission of disease between wild and 
domestic animals and the competition for forage between livestock and 
game may also make some farmers dubious as to the value of wildlife. 


ProsLEeMs IN USsE 


The public use of private lands for hunting purposes creates some of 
the most perplexing problems associated with game and wild-fur pro- 
duction and use. 


@ 


\ 


42 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


HUNTER PROBLEM 


Columns 21 and 22 in table 5 indicate the wide variation of hunting 
pressures exerted in various parts of the United States. As the seasons 
and bag limits of all States are not the same, the number of licenses 
sold per unit of land area is not an accurate indication of the hunting 
pressure nor does this method of measurement recognize the variability 
In game productivity of the land. Nevertheless, it is the best statistical 
indicator now available. 

According to these estimates in New Jersey, 1 license is issued for 
every 34 acres potentially available for hunting purposes. On the 
other hand, in Nevada one license is issued for every 11,724 acres. 
These figures do not take into consideration lands posted by private 
owners that are not available for public hunting. In general, the 
greater the hunting pressure the stronger the inclination of private 
Jandowners to post against public hunting so the situation is much 
more acute than is indicated by this table. 

Hunting pressure is greatest near centers of population and the 
posting of private farm lands is most prevalent near large cities. 
This restriction is not so evident in the more remote rural districts. 

The matter of private posting of lands is of great importance to 
the State game departments, since they want their license purchas- 
ers to have opportunities to hunt. Practically all lands capable of 
producing game and being used by the public for hunting purposes 
are privately owned or controlled. Under present conditions nearly 
all rural areas that are not posted against trespass are hunted over. 
The suggestion that State game departments buy public shooting 
lands is not a logical solution of the problem, for this would require 
that these departments own most of the rural lands of the State if 
they were to provide shooting conditions comparable with those now 
existing. 

At least two general classes of damage to farmers’ property are 
associated with public hunting on private land—one attributable to 
the hunters, the other to the game. The damage inflicted directly 
or indirectly by the hunters involves the injury or destruction of 
livestock, poultry, crops, or other property. The farmer is justifiably 
indignant when parties unknown to him and without his permission 
persist in entering upon his property without consideration of his 
inalienable rights to peaceful possession. Although it is acknowl- 
edged by all concerned that only a small proportion of the persons 
engaged in hunting are responsible for these misdemeanors, these 
acts of vandalism occur with sufficient fre equency to keep alive a 
certain antagonism toward public hunting. The destruction of prop- 
erty by hunters is important to the farmer who suffers the loss. So 
far as is known, the landowner has no recourse except to bring court 
action against the individual hunter, and as he seldom has knowl- 
edge of the guilty person he seldom is in a position to prosecute the 
case successfully. 

Damage caused by game to crops also affects the farmer’s attitude 
toward public hunting, Only a very few of the State game depart- 
ments provide for payment for damage by game. This naturally is 
reflected in the farmer’s attitude towards production of game to be 
used by the public. Farmers in general apparently want to encour- 
age and maintain a reasonable supply of game on their farms. Many 


SSS 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 43 


of them like to hunt and to share the game with their friends. But 
when wildlife becomes abundant enough to do appreciable damage, 
the farmer wants compensation or the right to control the game on 
his land. When hunters or trappers become a nuisance, he wants 
help in controlling them. Farmers’ complaints about game damage 
are often found to be aimed at the hunter-and-trapper nuisance and 
not the actual damage inflicted by the game. 

Many of the problems associated with public hunting on private 
land originate in our present-day concept of the legal status and 
ownership of game and wild fur. The law of ownership and regu- 
lation of wild game, as it existed in the Roman and early common 
law of England is well stated in the following excerpts from the 
opinion of Justice White in the case of Geer vs. Connecticut (161, 
U.S. 519, 522-528) ; “From the earliest traditions the right to reduce 
animals ferae naturae to possession has been subject to the control 
of the law giving power. * * * No restriction, it would hence 
seem, was placed by the Roman law upon the power of the individual 
to reduce game of which he was the owner in common with other 
citizens, to possession, although the Institutes of Justinian sometimes 
recognized the right of an owner of land to forbid another from 
killing game on his property, as indeed this right was impliedly 
admitted by the Digest in the passage just cited.” 

The colonists who settled in America carried with them knowledge 
of the common law of England. After the American Revolution 
the question arose as to whether the newly independent colonies had 
a common law. It was decided that the common law of England 
plus English statutes before the Revolution, so far as applicable to 
our conditions, constituted the common law. Thus the State ac- 
quired the title of the King, and so it has been held uniformly in 
this country that the wild game is owned by the State in its sovereign 
capacity in trust for the people. 

In the days of expansion, exploration, and settlement, the wildlife 
of the Nation was an important source of sustenance to the colonists, 
explorers, and early settlers. So it was decided that the governing 
power should provide in all ways proper for the utilization of this 
natural resource by the people. At that time much of the land was 
in public ownership and it was largely upon these lands that wildlife 
was produced and hunted. 

As the ownership of game by the State in its sovereign capacity 
in trust for the benefit of the people rests upon the common law 
and not upon the statutes, the decisions reached in the United States 
Supreme Court, the Federal courts, and the appellate courts of the 
48 States, in themselves fix the legal status of wildlife. Many of 
these decisions, however, were reached and promulgated under cir- 
cumstances that no longer exist. For example, it is estimated that 
approximately 75 percent of the land in the United States is pri- 
vately owned and that at least an equal proportion of game is 
produced on lands in private ownership. 

Laws and regulations promulgated to restrict kill are designed to 
perpetuate the species or distribute adequately opportunities for the 
citizens to acquire their proportionate share of the game. Although 
the States make provision whereby the private landowner may exer- 
cise his right to control trespass, the laws in that respect are frequently 


44 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


isolated from the game laws of the governing power. Thus, although 
laws relating to game are often formulated, and are administered by 
the respective game departments, laws for the control of trespass are 
usually among the general statutes. This means that officers em- 
ployed to enforce game regulations do not have authority to prosecute 
trespass violations, and they seldom have the inclination. It there- 
fore becomes necessary for the landowner to swear out a warrant, and 
appear in a court if he wishes to obtain legal protection against 
trespass. 

The courts have repeatedly held that the owner has the right to 
designate who may or who may not enter upon his property and to 
this extent only does he control the game and hunting privileges. 

In some States it has been held that if the landowner prohibits the 
pursuit by the public of wild birds or animals on his property, he 
hkewise forfeits his right to take publicly owned wild birds or animals. 

Although a person has no inherent right to hunt on the premises of 
another, a L right to so hunt may be acquired by a grant from the owner, 
or the owner may sell or lease his premises and reserve to himself the 
hunting and fowling rights thereon. In the case of Bingham vs. 
Salene (15 Oreg. 208), the court decided that “an owner of lands may 
convey specific hunting rights thereon to hunt so as to bar himself from — 
hunting on his own premises.” 

The difficulties involved in the legal administration of game are 
complicated by the fact that public attitude frequently determines the 
degree of enforcement of laws. It has been said that under certain 
local administrations, a sporting license to all intents and purposes 
constitutes a search warrant since the game officials or other State 
law-enforcing officers take no active part in prosecuting trespassers. 
In recent years, there is greater public recognition of the fact that 
the farmer has the right to say who may enter upon his property, and 
where and when. This changing attitude is making possible the pas- 
sage of laws which more adequately protect the farmer and his prop- 
erty, and enable him to receive consideration, if not remuneration, 
in connection with hunting privileges. 

In the past, most hunting, trapping, and wildlife-conservation laws, 
regulations, policies, and attitudes have failed to give sufficient con- 
sideration to the landowner or to the protection of his rights, and have 
usually been concerned with local conditions only. Each State has 
developed a different set of laws, regulations, and policies relative to 
wildlife production, conservation, and utilization, few of which give 
Just credit to the farmer for his part in producing game and fur 
animals or for allowing the public to use his land while using wild- 
hfe. The three outstanding shortcomings of these laws and Teoula- 
nee are: (1) The inadequate provision ‘made for enforcing trespass 
laws; (2) the failure to explicitly grant the farmer permission to 
control wildlife and hunting on his land, subject to reasonable State 
and Federal control; and (3) the failure either to place conservation 
personnel on a stable and efficient basis, or to remove wildlife con- 
servation and utilization from the influence of pressure groups. Dur- 
ing recent years there has been a tendency toward the recognition and 
remedyi ing of these shortcomings 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 45 


FARM-GAME MANAGEMENT PROGRAMS 


The theory has been advanced that the adoption of some sort of 
management plan will somewhat retard the progressive movement 
toward closing private farm land to public use for hunting and trap- 
ping, and that such a program will assist in the solution of many 
wildlife-production problems. 

The term “game management” has been variously interpreted, but 
it has usually been thought of as assuring the welfare of the game 
and wild-fur animals. For the purpose of this discussion, lands on 
which a conscious effort has been made to increase game and wild 
fur and direct its utilization will be considered as managed lands. 


PuRPOSES 


Management for increased production has developed through. vari- 
ous stages; now it may involve restriction of hunting, control of pred- 
ators, maintenance of refuge areas, restocking, and environmental 
manipulation. The degree to which each of these practices is neces- 
sary is determined by local conditions and the objective of the 
undertaking. 

When farm-game programs have been undertaken by the State 
- game departments or by organized sportsmen, the purpose has been 
to increase hunting opportunities by providing for a more abundant 
supply of game and for public access to private lands. When engaged 
in by the farmers, the purpose has generally been to protect their 
holdings from trespass and to restrict the public use of their lands.. 
Only in isolated instances is the money consideration of paramount 
importance in farmer-initiated programs, 


TYPES 


Although various elements appear to be common to all types of 
managed areas, probably no two units are identical in their concept 
and operation. For the purpose of classification, however, they may 
be divided on the basis of land control under the following cate- 
gories: Privately owned and operated land, club-owned and _ club- 
operated holdings, club-leased lands, farmer cooperatives, farmer- 
sportsmen cooperatives, State-managed lands, State-leased lands, and 
State and Federally owned lands. Not all of these types have an 
important or direct bearing on the farm-game problem. 


PRIVATELY OWNED AND OPERATED HOLDINGS 


Privately owned and operated hunting areas on agricultural lands 
vary from modest to elaborate enterprises and may be maintained 
primarily for the pleasure of the owner and his friends or for money 
returns. Such units seldom, if ever, provide any facilities for public 
use, but they do relieve pressure on open lands to the extent that hunt- 
ers possessing these exclusive privileges are not in competition for the 
areas more accessible to the public. Private holdings, even though of 
considerable acreage, seldom furnish facilities for more than a very 
few individuals and are rarely put to maximum use. Where man- 
aged more or less intensively, such tracts are said to bring about bet- 
ter hunting opportunities on the surrounding areas by acting as reser- 


46 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


voirs from which surplus game and wild fur replenish overhunted | 
covers in the immediate vicinity, and when only lightly hunted they 
act to some extent as refuges for game and wild fur. Such holdings 
are most frequently confined to lands of low value. When the higher J, 


priced, more intensively used agricultural lands have been closed to 9, 
public hunting the principal object has been to restrict trespass and 9) 
not to provide hunting or to improve conditions for game and wild §) 


fur. The money expended in the management of privately owned 9} 
areas varies from inconsiderable sums to many thousands annually, | 
depending on the interest and financial standing of the operator. j 
As some owners consider game and wild fur and the opportunities of 
hunting them a valuable business and social asset, they exercise their 


control to provide recreation for friends and business associates. Pos- | 


sibilities in this direction have not been fully realized but are being 
increasingly appreciated. Opening of some lands now closed to hunt- 


ing might be encouraged by calling to the attention of their operators 9 


the fine opportunity to entertain associates. By building up coverts | 
and increasing the carrying capacity of the land, the owner or even | 
the renter can make his invitation to hunt a real privilege—a decided 
business and social asset. | | 

Game management on privately owned units has not proved a de- | 
pendable source of revenue. Encouragement of such units on land | 
already posted against public use might tend to relieve the pressure on | 
open areas, but unless the land had been previously closed, their addi- | 
tion to the total not available for public hunting would only intensify | 
the existing situation that is undesirable from the viewpoint of the 
hunting public and the State conservation departments. 


CLUB-OWNED AND CLUB-OPERATED HOLDINGS 


Small sportsmen’s clubs seldom own enough acreage to provide hunt- 
ing for their members. The holdings commonly consist of a small area | 
surrounding a clubhouse, trap-shooting grounds, rifle range, etc. 
Members must depend on open land for their hunting. 

Holdings owned and operated by the wealthier clubs are, in general, 
more elaborate and provide hunting and fishing for members and — 
guests. The memberships are restricted and fees are usually quite | 
high. Although conditions are generally more favorable for the pro- | 
duction of wildlife, the acreage of these organizations to each user is 
usually much greater than that of the open areas. On account of the 
exclusive and restrictive elements such clubs are often opposed. 

In general, land owned by a club and operated as a hunting preserve 
is ina wild state, and the only agricultural use ordinarily made of the 
land is for well-distributed wildlife food patches. So far as known, 
no club operates for the production and harvesting of upland game on 
high-grade agricultural land. Waterfowling clubs are occasionally 
located on fertile acreages, but as their land requirements are re- 
stricted to a narrow shore-line, they do not materially encroach upon 
agricultural lands. 

CLUB-LEASED LANDS 


Clubs that do not have sufficient finances to own and maintain lands 
often lease extensive acreages for their exclusive use. They seldom 
are able to make any worth-while effort to improve environmental con- 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 47 


ditions, and there is apparently a tendency to be careless in preserving 
the breeding stock. If the supply becomes madequate or somewhat 
depleted, there is an inclination to increase the acreage by negotiating 
additional leases. As such arrangements lack permanency and an ex- 
clusion element is involved, these practices are even less desirable from 
the public standpoint than club ownership. Cooperation between the 
— landowner and the hunter is necessary ; because one party or the other 
- becomes dissatisfied, such undertakings seldom endure over a long pe- 
riod. Landowners, wanting maximum rentals, force the leases up; 
ultimately financial limitations cause either the abandonment of the 
project or the elimination of the members who are least able to pay. 

Under lease management, the landowner receives a money return for 
the privilege of hunting. It is estimated that a minimum of between 
50 and 100 acres is required per gun per season, even on the better game 
producing areas; therefore, the rental that a club of this type can 
afford to pay is relatively low, usually only a few cents per acre. The 
money return to the farmer does not always compensate for the incon- 
venience involved, particularly on high-priced or intensively managed 
farm lands. 

FARMER COOPERATIVES 


Farmer cooperatives, in this connection, are usually established 
to control trespass. The management and administration of such 
units remain with the farmers. Most of the revenue is spent for 
buying posters and for patrol. The incentive in the more successful 
instances has not’ been cash profit but better protection of property. 
Except where landowners can be prevailed upon to open previously 
closed areas, the plan has very definite hmitations. Most plans of 
this nature include an established charge, specified and collected by 
the landowners. A limited number of permits are available and are 
required of all persons hunting, fishing, or trapping on the acreages 
involved. 

Such programs have occasionally been established as sources of 
revenue for community enterprises and the successful plans appear 
to be always associated with some other local institution such as the 
church, school, or grange. Cooperatives of this kind are not likely 
to be opposed by other organized groups or by game departments so 
long as they do not involve large tracts. Because of the restrictive 
elements involved, the widespread adoption of this plan would mean 
the withdrawal of hunting and fishing facilities from many indi- 
viduals. In heavily populated areas and in intensive agricultural 
districts, however, some restrictive measures are imperative, and this 
arrangement probably meets with the approval of the farmers as 
well or better than most plans. 

On one area of this kind the cost to the farmer of controlling 
the hunters has been found to be 3.3 cents per acre for the purchase 
of posters and the hiring of deputy wardens, with the farmers con- 
tributing, free of cost, an equal amount in material and services. 
The receipts from the sale of hunting privileges amount to 6.5 cents 
per acre. Hunters have taken one piece of game for every 7 acres, 
and the game commission traps for restocking elsewhere 1 pheasant 
for every 22 acres. This is a total take of 1 piece of game per 5.3 
acres. Of the 6.5 cents per acre that the associated farmers receive 
from the sale of hunting privileges, they have 3.2 cents per acre left 


48 CIRCULAR 636, U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


to pay the farmer for damage done by the hunters or by the game, for | 
the materials and time contributed in controlling the hunters, for pro- 
viding feed and cover for the game. In many instances this food and 
cover can be provided rather inexpensively as illustrated in figures 4,/ 
7,8 and 12. As the hunter has paid 6.5 cents per acre for his hunting | 
privilege in this area and takes 1 piece of game per 7 acres, the privilege | 
costs him more than 45 cents for each piece of game bagged, without | 
including any other hunting expenses. | 


RANCH HUNTING PRESERVES 


Ranch hunting preserves are confined chiefly to the deer and wild 
turkey range of the Southwest where the land, although in private | 
ownership, is in large holdings of 1,000 acres or more and devoted | 
primarily to grazing. They are established and operated by indi-_ 
vidual ranchers to control trespass and for the purpose of selling | 
the wildlife crop by selling hunting privileges. 

Management of one of these preserves remains with the rancher | 
but is subject to the restrictions of preserve permits which the rancher 
must obtain from the State game commission when his preserve is 
established. Permits must be renewed each year. Subject only to 
the preserve permit regulations, which require the rancher to main- 
tain breeding stock and sets a top limit on the fee that may be 
charged for hunting privileges, the rancher manages the wildlife on 
his land much as he does his other livestock. In fact, he usually 
considers the deer and wild turkey as part of his livestock even 
though they often leave his premises. The State enforces trespass 
and game laws. | 

These preserves are practicable only where the following condi- 
tions prevail: (1) Large private holdings of relatively rough range 
land; (2) enforcement by the State of trespass and game laws; and 
(3) easy accessibility of the range to sportsmen having more than 
average incomes. 

From the short-time viewpoint these preserves present a very defi- 
nite limit on hunting opportunities as many who would like to hunt 
are unable to pay the required fee and as only a limited number are J 
allowed to hunt on any ranch. Nevertheless, perpetuation of breed-J 
ing stock is assured. This type of game management seems to be 
expanding and all interested parties appear to be relatively well sat- 
isfied. These preserves are credited with having been responsible. to 
a very large degree, for preventing the extirpation of deer and wild 
turkey in some States. | 

In one State, where ranch hunting preserves are well established 
and are spreading, the State collects an annual preserve permit fee 
of $5 plus 10 percent of receipts from the sale of hunting privileges. 
The State enforces trespass and game laws, but the rancher has to 
post his own land and do some patrolling. Since the operating 
units are large these costs per acre are very small. 

The gross return per acre from the sale of hunting privileges 
range from about 10 to 50 cents per acre. These returns, like the 
per acre return from range cattle and sheep, depend upon the care 
and attention given the wildlife. The ranchers value a deer at about 
as much as a steer, and a wild turkey at about as much as a sheep. 

Hunting privileges vary from $2 to $4 a day. The average kill 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 49 


for a large area is 1 deer per 200 acres and 1 wild turkey per 130 
acres. 
FARMER-SPORTSMAN COOPERATIVES 


In efforts to open lands closed to public hunting, sportsmen’s 
clubs have made cooperative agreements with farmers. These pro- 
grams do not involve a rental fee. The clubs agree to furnish 
additional protection in the form of posters and patrols. Patrol- 
men are customarily farmers within the cooperative, paid by club 
funds. The common procedure is to permit only club members to 
hunt, but in a very few instances the lands are open to the public. 
One of the essentials of such cooperatives is close personal and social 
relationship between the hunters and the farmer. Thorough under- 
standing and tolerance on the part of both groups is necessary. 
To assure success, an extensive educational program is also necessary. 
The restrictive element is tempered in this type of controlled area 
which is seldom as satisfactory to the farmer as some of the plans 
previously discussed. 

These programs are generally successful only ~on the less inten- 
sively cultivated and less valuable lands. The plan does not afford 
as complete protection as some others and may prove inadequate 
where the demand for hunting is exceptionally great. It generally 
is loosely administered and requires the continued stimulation of an 
influential local leader. The farmer receives nothing that he was not 
already entitled to without the necessity of organizations and agree- 
ments. The sportsmen gain hunting privileges on additional lands, 
often for their exclusive use. 


STATE-MANAGED LANDS 


State-managed lands, or “controlled.shooting areas,” are sponsored 


by State conservation departments. The plan gives the farmer no 
direct remuneration but supplies additional patrol and certain other 
advantages. The prestige and law-enforcing prerogative of the de- 
partment give this plan a more official status. The object is to reopen, 
or forestall the closing of, lands to public hunting use, or to im- 
prove the game production on the managed areas. 

The shortcomings are comparable to the limitations of the pre- 
ceding plan. The procedure invariably provides for the use of the 
land by the general public and so does not have the restrictive 
elements. Without rigid supervision and continued vigilance by the 
game department, the protection afforded the landowner will prob- 
ably be ineffective. Nothing is included in the restrictions which 
would not be practiced in the name of good sportsmanship any- 
way. Although the working of this plan is in part education by force, 
the principal advantage is the influence on the sportsman. It places 
the game department in the position of protecting the farmers’ 
rights and of making sportsmen conscious of the fact that hunting on 
private property is a privilege and not a right. 

The cost of such undertakings has been relatively high. In one 
State the game commission spent 50 cents an acre to start such a 
program. This did not provide for paying the landowner for im- 
proving wildlife conditions or permitting public hunting. State offi- 
clals estimated that it would cost 35 cents an acre per year to 


50 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


administer the area after it was established. In another State where 
the game commission is administering a farm-game program, the © 
sportsmen reimburse the farmers for the time and material used in | 
improving food and cover conditions for wildlife. It has been found | 
that the average cost of supplying the annually renewable food and | 
cover is 12 cents per acre of huntable land. As it is estimated that | 
not more than one piece of game can be taken from every 4 or 5 | 
acres, the program is rather expensive per head of game bagged. | 


STATE-LEASED LANDS 


State game departments in a number of instances have leased lands © 
for public hunting. The rental payment is usually 10 or 15 cents | 
per acre. The objective is to keep lands open to hunting, but the 
plan involves the fewest restrictive elements of any yet described. 
The amount of the fee paid is controlled by the State which reduces 
the possibilities of exploitation. The plan in practice seldom gives 
a sufficient cash return to bring under it the better types of farm lands 
or to provide for improvements through additional plantings, food 
patches, or refuges. The statement has been made that the practice 
has a detrimental effect on the general morale of both the sportsman 
and the landowner. The owner feels that the better the hunting is. 
on his land the more his land will be overrun by hunters and, as 
he ordinarily receives the same rate of pay for the land regardless 
of productivity, it is not to his advantage to increase the quantity of 
game or the carrying capacity of the land without additional cash 
payments. The hunter is likely to be more careless of his conduct 
on these leased lands, as he thinks he is there by right. Unless the | 
hunters’ acts constitute vandalism, there is little likelihood that the 
farmer will receive much satisfaction from the State. The plan is 
not conducive to better cooperation, nor is it probable that it will 
curtail posting or keep open good farm lands where hunting pres- 
sure is intense. The possibilities are limited to marginal and sub- 
marginal lands. In many instances, it might be more satisfactory 
to buy them. 

STATE AND FEDERALLY OWNED LANDS 


It is not economically feasible for the State or Federal Government 
to own or operate, for the primary purpose of game and wild-fur pro- 
duction and utilization, large tracts that are adapted to the more 
intensive types of agriculture. Such ownership and use must be 
restricted to marginal and wild lands. Because of habitat require- — 
ments, these lands require considerable environmental control to 
maintain a resident stock of farm game. Demand for hunting privi- 
leges on private lands is usually found in States that still have ade- 
quate public domain to provide free hunting opportunities. 

Public lands are not always open to hunting, as in many instances 
they have been bought to establish refuges and sanctuaries and not 
for use as hunting areas. It might.be logical sometimes to establish 
refuges on private lands and to open the publicly owned areas to hunt- 
ing. When public lands are allowed to grow up with dense vegetation, — 
they become unsuitable as game covers, because wildlife requires a con- 
siderable amount of open space as well as cover. Establishment of 
such areas requires provision for proper management and care, which, 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION ol 


‘without question, will be expensive. On private lands this cost is 
now borne by the land operator. The problem varies among the 
States and within the State, but the use of public lands to relieve hunt- 
“ing pressure on private lands offers possibilities wherever such areas 
“are available. 


PREVALENCE AND DIsTRIBUTION 


Programs for farm-game management are most prevalent in the 
better agricultural districts of the United States, the cooperative type 
appearing with greater frequency where land holdings are relatively 

small and land values comparatively high. ‘The frequency of their 
occurrence varies with the hunting pressure. The more successful co- 
operative enterprises are commonly located near centers of population. 
Privately owned and controlled management areas are usually on 
lands of low value where the individual holdings are of considerable 
extent. They may be relatively small in area and number but some 
types or combination of types of management areas occur in all States. 
In no case, however, do they occupy any considerable part of a State. 


SUCCESS 


Judgment as to the success or failure of undertakings of this kind 
is largely a matter of individual opinion. A certain program may be 
considered by an individual or group as being entirely successful be- 
cause it accomplishes the principal objective in mind. On the other 
hand, this same project may be considered a complete failure by another 
“person or association with different motives. For example, farmers 
who want to control trespass may consider the program successful if 
they succeed in controlling it, whereas the sportsman who formerly 
hunted this area, unrestricted, ‘and now finds he can no longer do it, or 
who had expected a considerable increase in the game which did not 
materialize , may consider the program a failure. The degree of success 
may perhaps best be appraised by the length of time a project continues 
to operate essentially in its original form. 

Although a number of projects have succeeded temporarily and 
locally, most apparently lacked the elements necessary for perma- 
nency or general adoption. The programs that have been more suc- 
cessful in increasing game have been restrictive in nature, and the 
‘increased production has been accomplished at costs prohibitive to 
public enterprises. Where sufficient restriction on hunting is exer- 
cised, the difficulties in producing an adequate supply of game and 
wild ‘fur are minimized. 
| The production of game and wild fur is still an incidental enterprise 
as associated with agriculture. The rental fees paid to private owners 
seldom cover the cost of management and would have to be increased 
if the projects are to be put on a self-sustaining basis. Public lands 
‘only occasionally are managed for game production and hunting be- 
cause of insufficient funds and technical supervision. 

Plans initiated primarily to maintain public hunting on private 
property have seldom been successful for any considerable time. Any 
‘such program includes several individual landowners and farmers, 
some of whom become dissatisfied because of insufficient returns or 
Inadequate protection with respect to trespass, so they withdraw from 
ithe association. This is particularly true when the organization is not 


a2 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


of their own sponsorship. Likewise, it involves the cooperation of a_ 
number of individual hunters who, in turn, may become disappointed 
with the quality of sport provided or the restrictions imposed. 

The limited quantity of game and wild fur naturally produced on 
farms restricts the possibilities of cash returns from their sale. State 
Jaws do not permit the direct sale of wildlife (although they do permit 
the sale of fur) and to get returns the farmer is forced to sell hunting 
privileges—an intangible asset on which no standard money value has 
yet been established. Because the privileges of hunting, trapping, and 
fishing have long been free on all lands in the United States, the hunt- 
ers, trappers, and anglers are reluctant to pay landowners for them. 

Further. there are still enough open lands to influence the sale value 
of hunting rights. Unless a landowner sells exclusive rights or can 
assure better than ordinary opportunities, there is little demand for 
the privileges. 

Up to the present time, most money collected from shooting areas 
has been expended on additional posting, patrol, and restocking, so 
very little if any profit has been realized. The returns have not been 
enough to interest farmers in practicing the more intensive kinds of 
game management on high-priced lands.. The sale of hunting rights on 
farm lands has not been generally lucrative, and from the farmer’s 
point of view, the closing of small farms to public use is often prefer- 
able. 

Neither farm-game programs nor game-management areas have had 
much effect on the organization, management, practices, or income of 
farms but both have often reduced the losses caused by wildlife and 
hunters and trappers. 

Farm-game programs have not been generally successful when 
judged from the viewpoint of all parties concerned. Failures are 
commonly due to inability to harmonize the conflicting interests of 
the farmers and the hunters. Farmers want more protection for 
their property and individual rights at little or no additional effort 
or cost, and the hunters want more game and more hunting oppor- 
tunities at little or no additional cost. The following incentives 
seem to be necessary if the land operator is to be induced to provide 
game and allow the public to use his land in taking it: (1) Pro- 
tection from trespass occasioned by the presence of game and wild- 
fur animals; (2) opportunity to receive adequate compensation in 
the form of money, social, esthetic, or recreational returns for his 
effort in providing game and allowing semipublic hunting; (8) com- 
plete control of hunting and hunters on his property subject to fair 
and reasonable regulations by law; and (4) custodianship of wild- 
life on his property subject to fair and reasonable regulation by law. 


FUR AND GAME FARMS 


Fur Farms 


Fur farms in the United States confine their production largely to 
the silver fox and mink. In recent years great strides have been 
made in this industry. In 1939, 200,000 minks were produced in 
captivity for pelting. The number of silver-fox skins produced in 
this country has increased from an estimated 6,000 in 1923 to 325,000 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 53 


‘in 1939. It is probable that more than a million silver-fox pelts 
enter the world-trade channels annually. 

_ The production of fur in pens requires skill and highly technical 
training. As the animals are particularly difficult to handle, subject 
‘to disease, and sensitive to diet, fur farming is not considered an 
‘occupation suitable for the inexperienced. 

_ The possibilities in this field are apparently somewhat limited, but 
the exploitative characteristic of this enterprise a few years ago has 
abated, so the industry is stabilizing and is now having a somewhat 
slower but decidedly healthier growth. The products of fur farms 
‘supply a luxury demand and are therefore subject to extreme price 
fluctuation. It has been estimated that pen-reared fur supphes 20 
percent of the present market. The quantity of wild-trapped fur 


is said to be diminishing, but the 80 percent of fur sales that it has 


represented is not all potential market for pen-reared fur because 
of the nature of the product and of the species involved. 


GaME Farms 


Game farms are maintained principally to produce game birds and 
‘animals for restocking. Mature birds so produced usually sell for 
‘$2 to $2.50 each, but the market is limited. Many game species do 
not reproduce satisfactorily in confinement. The principal market 
for birds or animals of this kind is with the State game depart- 
ments, and as most of these have found it more satisfactory to oper- 
ate their own farms, this opportunity for the agriculturist to develop 
a supplementary income is limited. 

_ Successful operation of game farms requires specialized skill and 
experience which the average farmer does not possess, hence it is not 
considered to be an occupation for the untrained. 


} 


ENCOURAGING GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION 
AND UTILIZATION ON AGRICULTURAL LANDS 


ATTITUDES OF INTERESTED PARTIES 


The study revealed that most farmers and others who are pri- 
marily interested in agriculture have given no serious consideration 
to increasing wildlife in the past, and that hunters, trappers, and 
others most interested in game and fur animals have given little 
thought to agriculture or to the farmers and their rights. This lack 
of common interest has frequently brought such bitterness between 
the farmer and hunter or trapper that the farmer has purposely 
destroyed food, cover, and wildlife in order to discourage hunting 
and trapping. But it was found that agricultural leaders and con- 
‘servation leaders were ready to cooperate under Federal leadership 
Jm_ attempting to solve the many problems involved in the inter- 
relations of agriculture and wildlife production and utilization. 

__ Those interested in agriculture seemed to view the problem from 
the standpoint of protecting the farmers from losses and imposi- 
‘ons rather than of assuring them an income from wildlife, or of 
Increasing the game supply. On the other hand, those interested 
‘In wildlife seemed to be inclined to cooperate with agriculture for 
the purpose of increasing or maintaining the supply of game and 


54 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


hunting opportunities rather than from a desire to establish wildlife 
as a source of income for farmers. 

A rather common attitude found among hunters and trappers was 
that as the State claims ownership of the game and fur animals wher- 
ever they may be, and as the game commission has sold them hunting 
and trapping licenses, they have a right to hunt and to take possession 
of game and fur animals wherever they are found, without regard to 
the wishes or legal rights of the landowners, and that posting or other 
restrictions placed upon them by the landowners constitute an in- 
fringement of rights purchased from the State. This attitude has 
caused the farmers further to curtail hunting and trapping opportu- 
nities and to force respect for property and personal rights. Fortu- 
nately, an increasing number of hunters and trappers now realize 
that, although they have bought a license, access to private property 
to hunt or trap is a privilege that must be earned before being en- 
joyed and is not a right that can be bought from the game commission. 
An increasing number of hunters and trappers make it a point to 
request permission to hunt or trap. This improved behavior recipro- 
cally causes farmers to have a better attitude toward both wildlife 
and the semipublic utilization of it. 

Farmers, in general, want to encourage and maintain a reasonable 
supply of wildlife on their farms, but when it becomes abundant 
enough to do appreciable damage, they want permission to control the 
kinds and quantity of wildlife on their land, and, when hunters or 
trappers become a nuisance, they also want to be assisted in control- 
ling them. In many cases, where farmers have made claims for 
damage inflicted by wildlife or have seemingly been trying to reduce 
wildlife, it has been found that the real cause of complaint and of 
neglect of wildlife was the hunter and trapper nuisance and not the 
damage inflicted by wildlife. ) 


THE PRoBLEM 


Publications are available on methods of encouraging the produc- 
tion of game on agricultural lands. Fundamentally, however, such 
encouragement is a problem of human relationships. Recognizing 
that many of the more important game and wild-fur species are de- 
pendent upon agricultural lands for a living and that hunters are. 
largely dependent upon such lands if they are to pursue their sport, 
it is evident that the closest possible relationships should be main- 
tained between the game and agricultural interests. Oddly enough, 
this is not true at present. Other interests associated with agricul- 
ture have established and maintained close contacts, yet game and 
fur administration on the whole seems to be operated independently - 
of agricultural institutions. 


RECOMMENDATIONS 


No permanent or practical solution to the many problems associated 
with the production and utilization of game and wild fur on agri- 
cultural lands can be anticipated until the agricultural and game 
interests are brought into closer harmony. Proper coordination can 
materially improve this situation by bringing about a full recognition 
of the problems confronting both groups. In the past, educational 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 55 


programs relative to game and wild fur when sponsored by game and 
sporting interests were of such a nature that they were considered by 
many farmers—and not a few farm leaders—as propaganda cam- 
aligns. 

: As the sporting element has the greatest interest in the situation 
and no other group is willing to assume the task of bringing about 
the needed coordination, it appears reasonable that those interested 
in preserving the privilege of hunting should assume the responsi- 
bility of achieving a better understanding. 

Provision might be made for encouraging the teaching of true 
principles of conservation in all educational institutions, and for 
presenting to the agricultural interests information relative to the 
production and utilization of game and wild fur. Simultaneously 
game interests should be informed as to the problems of the 
agriculturist. 

Wildlife endeavors of all kinds should be coordinated with agri- 
cultural enterprises and should include both production and 
utilization. 


GENERAL CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 


At present, especially on good farm land, there is little or no in- 
centive for the farmer to use his resources in the propagation of 
game and other wildlife for public or semipublic use, because the 
users not only fail to recompense him for his part in providing the 
wildlife and the facilities for its enjoyment, but they also often 
damage livestock, fences, and other property. In some sections, how- 
ever, especially where the land is poorly adapted to farming, and 
where trespass is rigidly controlled, there is some opportunity for the 
farmer to increase his income by the production of wildlife for semi- 
public use. 

In general, farmers are penalized for having wildlife, because the 
more abundant the game or fur animals, the more harm they do 
and the greater the nuisance and damage inflicted by hunters and 
trappers. Most game and fur animals on farms are there in spite 
of and not because of farming practices, whereas, if farmers received 
proper recognition, they would in many instances encourage wild- 
life as a byproduct of such farm practices as wood-lot management, 
erosion control, and soil and water conservation. 

Findings of this study indicate that if wildlife is to be perpetuated 
and enjoyed by the public, it must be produced by natural reproduc- 
tion on private farm land as well as on publicly owned land, and 
its utilization must be strictly controlled. Pen propagation and 
stocking have proved to be expensive and inadequate as a direct 
means of providing game. Publicly owned land can supply neither 
enough wildlife nor the facilities for its utilization by the public, 
and uncontrolled public utilization of wildlife on private farm land 
has proved to be destructive to farm property and to wildlife. 

Sporting and esthetic uses of wildlife are luxuries in the same 
class as golfing and horseback riding. It is no more unreasonable 
to expect the wildlife user, particularly the hunter who actually 
consumes wildlife, to pay to the landowner and others the full cost 
of providing his recreation than it is to expect the golfer and horse- 


56 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


back rider to pay for their recreation. Harvesting fur is a business 
proposition with the trapper, and it is Just as reasonable for the 
farmer or other landowner to receive pay for his part in providing 
fur animals and allowing others to use his land in taking them as it 
is for the owner of woodland to be paid for permitting others to 
cut the timber. There is no denying the fact that the farmer or 
other landowner is put to expense in producing game and fur and in 
allowing others to use his land in taking it. : 

If farmers are to provide wildlife and allow the public to utilize 
it, adequate incentives must be provided. In most cases, they may 
be nothing more than adequate protection of property and individual 
rights by control of wildlife and of the hunters and trappers, but 
in others money payments may be required. 

If the problems of providing wildlife and hunting opportunities 
for the public are to be solved, wildlife-conservation activities of all 
kinds must be removed from the influence of pressure groups. Ad- 
ministrative officials, the public, the farmers, and the sportsmen must 
be taught to realize that the recreational, social, and esthetic values of 
wildlife greatly exceed its economic value: and that wildlife is a 
natural resource that all have a right to enjoy. The rights of in- 
dividuals must be respected and protected even if this restricts public 
utilization of wildlife. The user must become willing to pay an in- 
creased amount and the farmer must be willing to accept a large part 
of the return for his efforts on behalf of wildlife in the form of such 
intangibles as recreational, esthetic, and social enjoyment. 

The study indicates the need for a coordinated conservation pro- 
gram that will make wildlife production and utilization an inherent 
part of land use and soil conservation programs; and for recognizing 
the rights of individual landowners as well as the rights of the wild- 
life users in all wildlife-conservation programs. 

It is recommended: (1) That wildlife conservation in all its phases, 
including research, education, and administration, be protected from 
the influence of pressure groups, with all conservation personnel placed 
on a stable merit basis; (2) that a comprehensive research and educa- 
tional program be maintained in each State with participation by the 
game commission, the agricultural college, the extension service, the 
agricultural experiment station, and the Federal Government; (3) 
that each State enact and enforce sound wildlife-conservation legis- 
lation, including laws and regulations adequately to control wildlife 
users, and to protect farmers and others against excessive wildlife 
damage and against trespass; (4) that the State game commissions 
and the public recognize that farmers and other landowners are the 
producers and custodians of wildlife on their land, and that they are 
entitled to protection and compensation in some form for efforts on 
behalf of wildlife; and (5) that cooperative consideration of wildlife- 
conservation problems be continued jointly by the Bureau of Agri- 
cultural Economics, United States Department of Agriculture, and 
oe Fish and Wildlife Service, United States Department of the 

nterior. 


SUMMARY 


The aborigines of this country used game and fur animals only 
for essentials. Today the emphasis is placed upon recreational and 


GAME AND WILD-FUR PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION 57 


esthetic uses. This has an important bearing on man’s demands 
on wildlife. When wildlife was used only to provide essentials, the 
- individual’s requirements were limited, but when used for recreational 
and esthetic purposes, the individual’s demand is practically un- 
limited. This change in use has created a new kind of demand, which 
tends to increase with the increase in income and leisure time of the 
_ people rather than with the population. Concurrently, the supply of 
wildlife has decreased. Originally, all wildlife was produced and 
harvested on public land. Today, more than 75 percent of our game 
and wild fur is produced and harvested on agricultural land. More 
_ than 80 percent of this land is privately owned. This change in owner- 
_ ship and use of land has placed upon the private landowner not only 
the expense of producing wildlife but also any loss resulting from 
damage caused by wildlife and wildlife users. 

In an effort to overcome the difficulties associated with these changes 
numerous plans and schemes have been sponsored during recent years. 
Judgment relative to the success or failure of an undertaking of this 
kind is largely a matter of individual opinion. A specific program 
may be considered successful, if 1t accomplishes the principal objective 
the individual or group has in mind. This same project may be con- 
sidered a complete failure by others having different objectives. The 
unsatisfactory results so commonly experienced in undertakings of 
this nature are, in a large part, caused by an inability of those con- 
cerned to harmonize the conflicting interests of the farmer and the 
hunter. The farmer wants more protection for his property and 
individual rights at little or no additional cost. The hunter wants 
more game and more hunting opportunities at little or no additional 
cost. The following incentives seem to be imperative if the land 
operator is to be induced to provide game and allow the public to use 
his land in taking game and fur: Protection from trespass occasioned 
by the presence of wildlife; opportunities to receive adequate compen- 
sation in the form of money, social, esthetic, or recreational returns 
for his efforts in providing game and allowing semipublic hunting; 
complete control of hunting and hunters on his property subject to fair 
and reasonable regulations by law, and custodianship of wildlife on 
his property subject to fair and reasonable regulations by law. 

Only in exceptional instances and under somewhat uncommon cir- 
cumstances are landowners able to obtain a revenue from game 
commensurate with the agricultural use of the land. Where the 
production and harvesting of wildlife can be harmonized with agri- 
cultural use, it can be made to produce a supplementary in- 
come. More frequently, it provides only recreational and esthetic 
opportunities. 

In general, farmers have been penalized for having wildlife on 
their land. The more abundant the game or fur animals the more 
damage they inflict and the greater the nuisance and damage caused 
by the hunters and trappers. As a result, most game and fur animals 
found on farms today are there in spite of agricultural practices or 
at best, accidentally. It is believed that if the farmer received proper 
recognition he would, in many instances, produce game and wild fur 
as a byproduct incidental to such farm practices as wood-lot man- 
agement, erosion control, and soil and water conservation. 


58 CIRCULAR 636, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 


It appears that if game and fur animals are to be perpetuated and 
enjoyed by the public, they must be produced primarily through 
natural reproduction on private farm land and their use strictly 
controlled. Pen propagation and stocking have proved expensive 
and inadequate as a direct means of providing game and wild fur. 
The principal use of pen-propagated animals is to restock depleted 
covers. Publicly owned land cannot supply enough wildlife or the 
facilities for its use by the public. Uncontrolled use of game and 
fur on farm land has proved to be destructive to private property 
and to wildlife. Today the use of wildlife may be considered as much 
a luxury as golf and horseback riding. It is not unreasonable to 
expect the participant to pay those who provide the facilities in either 
instance. Trapping is repeatedly pointed out as a business proposi- 
tion to the trapper and when trapping is done on other than the in- 
dividual’s own land, the cooperating landowner is entitled to re- 
muneration comparable with that received from the sale of sawlogs. 

It is becoming more evident that if the problems of providing game 
and fur animals with opportunities for public use are to be solved, 
wildlife conservation activities of all kinds must be removed from 
the influence of pressure groups. The wildlife user must expect to 

ay an increasing amount for his participation and the producer must 
Be willing to accept a large part of his remuneration fir his efforts 
on behalf of wildlife in the form of such intangibles as recreational, 
esthetic, and social enjoyment. 


O