Wildlife Stewardship And Recreation On Private Lands

Front Cover
Texas A&M University Press, 1999 - Business & Economics - 170 pages
Who owns wildlife? Common law, upheld by judicial decision, says that wildlife is owned in common by all citizens, and governments have the authority to manage wildlife on our behalf. An equally strong legal tradition, however, is the right of property owners to control the resources on and access to their lands. Two-thirds of lands are private and 85 percent of wildlife in the United States is found on these private lands, so how can governments carry out their management mission without encroaching on the property rights of landowners? If that mission is restricted, how can landowners be encouraged to manage and preserve wildlife?

Wildlife Stewardship and Recreation on Private Lands examines franchising systems that allow the public and private sectors to work together to set common goals and delegate responsibilities for the management of wildlife and users on private lands. Through enfranchisement, governments can empower landowners with management authority and offer guidance for them to manage wisely. The book considers ways governments and landowners can work together to be good stewards of the public's wildlife using recreation, tax advantages, and cost shares as incentives.

Although any enfranchisement system will have problems, Delwin E. Benson, Ross "Skip" Shelton, and Don W. Steinbach show that these problems can be overcome with cooperation and intelligent planning. Relationships among governments,

landowners, and recreational users should and can be based on trust and mutual respect. The authors focus on ways that these three groups can come together in a system of shared costs and benefits.

Conservationists, wildlife enthusiasts, hunters, land managers and landowners, wildlife professionals, and others interested in and involved with these issues will find this book an informative and indispensable guide to solving some of the problems of managing wildlife on private lands.

 

Contents

Rights in Conflict
3
Understanding the Controversies
8
The Commercialization of Wildlife
14
Useful Models of Landowner Enfranchisement The African Experience
19
Enfranchisement Examples in the United States
29
From Theory to Practice Constraints to Landowner Enfranchisement
36
Overcoming Constraints A Plan for Action
55
The Shape of the Franchise Agreement
64
Exploring Our Wilderness Values through Recreation on Private Lands
82
Toward a Personal Conservation Ethic
88
Wildlife Enterprise Analysis
97
Lease Agreements and Hunting Systems
105
Forming Wildlife Management Associations
115
Survey of State Wildlife Agency Efforts to Encourage Wildlife Management on Private Lands
119
References
151
Index
165

Shared Management of Nongame and Endangered Species
69
The Holistic Management Ideal
75

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