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Trophy hunting has affected the environment,Wolves,Kodiak bears,and Moose.
Trophy hunting has affected the environment,Wolves,Kodiak bears,and Moose.
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Wolves
Hunting
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Wolves aren’t being hunted for food. Hunters are making a personal decision to go out and kill a wolf just because it’s there .
Over 7,700 wolf tags were sold in Idaho alone to kill 11,000 wolves and Montana sold thousands to kill 536 wolves.
Moose
Now hunters have encountered this problem because they are hunting to much it looked like they were going to recover again but instead, this last year, we had another drop of about 50 percent.
Moose are the most sought after big game animal in Alaska. Hunters report harvesting over 7,000 of Alaska's estimated 175,000 moose each year.
Going out to get a moose is a fall ritual for tens of thousands of Alaskans. For beginning moose hunters, the most important thing to keep in mind is that moose are huge.
Kodiak Bears
These bears have been isolated since the end of the last Ice Age, and the abundant food supply of salmon runs, berry bushes and other edible plants in their habitat has produced this giant bear (Chadwick 1990). Trophy hunters pay $20,000 or more to private hunting guides for the privilege of shooting these bears
.They make at least 14,500 dollars by hunting one bear and the average hunter kills about 4.
The Kodiak Bear of Alaska represents a major trophy for hunters who come from all around the world to kill large males. This bear exceeds other subspecies in size, weight and skull size.
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