Blog

OPINION: Arkansas Game & Fish collars dog GPS proposal | The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette - Arkansas' Best News Source

The Arkansas Game and Fish approved a regulation Thursday that will allow hunters to kill only one mallard per day during the 2024-25 duck season.

The commission agreed on the proposal April 11 after a long discussion about steps the commission could take to increase breeding population of mallards in the springtime. Duck populations have fallen dramatically in recent years. State agencies do not influence migratory bird populations except to limit the number of ducks a hunter may kill in a day. For about 15 years, Arkansas regulations permit hunters to kill up to two hen mallards per day designer dog collar

Luke Naylor, chief of the commission's wildlife management division, said that hunters are already self-regulating their taking of mallard hens. Data that the commission collects from hunters reveals that hunters kill three drakes per one hen, a ratio that the proposed regulation is designed to achieve.

This datum demonstrates that duck hunters are sufficiently concerned about duck conservation to voluntarily limit their take of hen mallards. It also attests to hunters' ability to distinguish between drakes and mallards in the dim light of the first 30 minutes of a hunt, when some of the most exciting action occurs.

When snow returns to the northern prairies, there will be more ponds and duck numbers will increase.

At the same meeting, the commission tabled a proposed regulation that would require all dogs pursuing game animals to wear an electronic collar capable of GPS tracking as well as remote electronic correction.

A large group of constituents that hunt deer with dogs filled the commission's briefing room during the meeting. Grant Ballard, an attorney who grew up in the deer dog culture, addressed the commission to oppose the regulation. Ballard recalled his grandfather paying $150 for a beagle that became Ballard's prized rabbit hunting companion.

"If this (regulation) was in place, my granddad would not have peeled off an extra $1,700 for a Garmin tracking device," Ballard said. "I never would have gotten out of the gate."

A landowner from the Buckville area near Lake Ouachita spoke, not exactly to support the regulation, but to complain about the behavior of deer dog runners, especially during field trials and organized hunts. Deer dogs overrun his property during deer dog season, creating serious conflicts with owners. The photos and videos he showed the commission of multiple dogs with numerals painted on their coats induced solemness in the room.

One deer dog supporter said that the landowner tacitly agreed to be trespassed upon because he bought property in an area that traditionally hosts an organized deer dog hunt.

The regulation was ill-conceived. As Ballard said, it is onerous to require an owner to attach one expensive tracking and behavior correction device to one beagle. Rabbit hounds do not typically get far from their handlers. People that hunt rabbits with multiple beagles simply couldn't afford it. That goes also for bird dogs, to the extent than anybody hunts bird dogs anymore in Arkansas, and also to Labrador retrievers. If a Lab is chasing down a crippled mallard, it is pursuing game and would have to wear an approved device even though the dog never leaves visual contact with its owner.

dog weight pulling harness Material from the Associated Press is Copyright © 2024, Associated Press and may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Associated Press text, photo, graphic, audio and/or video material shall not be published, broadcast, rewritten for broadcast or publication or redistributed directly or indirectly in any medium. Neither these AP materials nor any portion thereof may be stored in a computer except for personal and noncommercial use. The AP will not be held liable for any delays, inaccuracies, errors or omissions therefrom or in the transmission or delivery of all or any part thereof or for any damages arising from any of the foregoing. All rights reserved.