First, there are many reasons people can have "legitimate" concerns over an 
issue like crane hunting, biological/conservation, emotional, religious, 
mystical, whatever. Birds and other natural resources are not the exclusive 
province of one segment of society; birders, hunters whomever and to limit the 
conversation to only biological concerns is not valid. The DNR is supposed to 
be managing natural resources for everyone in the state, not just a select few.

This then is the basis for our reaction to the DNRs unilateral, closed, and 
surprising decision. In Minnesota we expect natural resource decisions to be 
made in an open, transparent, and honest fashion. Opposed or in favor of 
Mourning Dove hunting?; the issue was publicly debated (for years) and brought 
before the state legislature for a vote. Even if you disagreed with the final 
outcome you had a forum to speak up. Want to know how the LCCMR or Lessard-Sams 
monies are being spent?; all those meetings are open to the public and the 
schedule is posted on state websites. Want to speak up about the 16-19 walleye 
slot limit on Farm Lake? - there are 2 public hearings this month to do so and 
information can be found on the front page of the DNR website right now!

The DNR should not be allowed to make a decision as important, controversial, 
and radical as opening a new hunting season on a species that has not been 
hunted in nearly 100 years without a full and thorough dialogue with the people 
of Minnesota.

Mark Martell
Director of Bird Conservation
Audubon Minnesota
2357 Ventura Dr. Suite 106
St. Paul, MN 55125
651-739-9332

http://mn.audubon.org/


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-----Original Message-----
From: Minnesota Birds [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Eric Harrold
Sent: Tuesday, July 27, 2010 10:47 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [mou-net] So why did Audubon and birders vehemently oppose a dove 
season in MN?

Was there any more biological justification to this opposition than there is to 
the recently enacted crane season? Of course not. Again, I don't have a problem 
with opposition, in the event folks can substantiate legitimate concerns. 
They're hunted throughout the Great Plains with the exception of stopover 
habitat along the Platte river (state of NE altogether I guess). It doesn't 
seem to have negatively impacted these populations, so do MN's birds come from 
an altogether different population - I don't think so.

Onward,

Eric Harrold
Urbana, IL

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