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Out of administrative control: Absentee owners, resident elk and the shifting nature of wildlife management in southwestern Montana
Authors:Julia Hobson Haggerty  William R Travis
Institution:a Centre for the Study of Agriculture, Food and the Environment, School of Social Science, University of Otago, PO Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand
b Department of Geography, University of Colorado Boulder, 260 UCB Boulder, CO 80309, USA
Abstract:This paper describes the historical roots of an ongoing wildlife management dilemma involving decreasing opportunities for elk management via public hunting on private land in the context of an expanding elk presence on private land in southwest Montana. Our main focus is on the role of private ranchland in elk ecology, and the ability of land owners to set elk migration in new directions through cumulative decisions about hunting and tolerating elk. This takes elk management, traditionally the purview of the state, out of administrative control. We document connections between the region’s historical and emerging land tenure patterns, and analyze associated changes in hunter access. Elk numbers expanded rapidly in the Upper Yellowstone Valley at a moment of significant transition in ranchland tenure. New owners more interested in natural amenities than in livestock production encouraged the elk and discouraged hunting. This reinforced the spread of elk, and further weakened the ability of the state and other ranchers to manage elk (which interfere with livestock production in numerous ways). Though elk and cattle use the landscape in similar ways, elk became more effective agents of landscape change in a reflexive relationship with ideas of land that stress natural amenities over production.
Keywords:Land tenure  Elk (Cervus elaphus)  Yellowstone National Park  Ranching  Hunting  Access  Private Property  Wildlife management  Animal geography
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