AlaskaBushPilot
Illuminator
- Joined
- Nov 6, 2010
- Messages
- 4,341
Eh... JREFers love to one up on the 'Oh... Oh Yeah?! They HAVE been spotted in Hawaii!! LINK LINK LINK' and pig thievery rather than answer your intriguing questions.
Intriguing in the same way asking about unicorns in my back yard is.
There's plenty of wild mushrooms and berries. Not to mention salmon and trout in the rivers and the odd dead deer.
We've seen this kind of handwaving before where you haven't actually said anything of substance, like surplus caloric value per acre available to a completely new species added on to the existing animal population.
You might just as well add all the food at grocery stores and people's refrigerators, as if there wasn't already people consuming them. Have you heard of steady-state equilibrium or carrying capacity?
You have to address the fact that existing animal populations are counted by professional wildlife managers, with seasons and bag limits for big game or fish established with recognition of the carrying capacity of the land & waters, reproduction cycles, hunter success rates, etc.
And they not only establish how many animals and fish we can catch and kill, but exactly what sex and size. No trout below a certain size, only bull moose with spike fork or over 50" antlers, etc. These management units are small, like individual drainages too.
So this is a gross argument from ignorance. Because it works from the presumption that nobody knows how many animals there are, what the carrying capacity of the land is, what the sustained yield is, etc. when in fact this is known in tremendous detail with profesionals working on it every day in fish/game departments, university studies, professional journals, etc.
It's no different from looking out on a rancher's pasture and saying "oh. look at all the grass - it's easy to see how a population of invisible buffalo could survive on this field." Except for the fact the farmer already has cattle grazing on the field or else he mows the hay and stores it in the barn.
Likewise you can't say "oh look how there are fish in the streams" and then postulate a population of invisible bigfoot eating them. For example, the summer run of chinook salmon on the Columbia was between 20,000-40,000 fish for a quarter century beginning in the mid 1970's.
You just go ahead and explain to me now how many of those closely watched salmon, counted at each dam they pass, all the way to spawning beds - are eaten by bigfoot. Are they eating the hatchery runs or the wild runs? Why is no fisheries biologist aware of this loss?
You have to do more than just say "there are fish in the river" to hypothesize an entire population of some predator species, let alone an imaginary one, is sustaining itself upon them.
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