Wildlife Stewardship and Recreation on Private Lands

Wildlife Stewardship and Recreation on Private Lands

ISBN-10:
1585444456
ISBN-13:
9781585444458
Pub. Date:
01/05/2005
Publisher:
Texas A&M University Press
ISBN-10:
1585444456
ISBN-13:
9781585444458
Pub. Date:
01/05/2005
Publisher:
Texas A&M University Press
Wildlife Stewardship and Recreation on Private Lands

Wildlife Stewardship and Recreation on Private Lands

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Overview

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.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781585444458
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Publication date: 01/05/2005
Series: Texas A&M University Agriculture Series , #1
Edition description: Revised ed.
Pages: 184
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.43(d)

About the Author


Delwin E. Benson is professor and extension wildlife specialist in the Department of Fishery and Wildlife Biology at Colorado State University. Ross "Skip" Shelton is distinguished professor of wildlife and land policy in the Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources at the University of Tennessee at Martin. Don W. Steinbach is professor and extension specialist in the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences at Texas A&M University.

What People are Saying About This

Richard McCabe

The Preface of this work starts: 'The role of landowners in providing wildlife conservation, recreational opportunities and ecosystem management on private lands . . . is not well established in either theory or practice.' The following pages constitute a recommended primer for the establishment in both. (Richard McCabe, Vice President, Wildlife Management Institute)

Jack Ward Thomas

As time passes, it becomes more and more obvious how important private lands are to maintenance of wildlife habitat—and in turn wildlife—in the United States. . . . This book does a most excellent job of delivery into the complexities, frustrations, rewards, and mechanism of management applicable to dealing with publicly owned wildlife on private lands. (Jack Ward Thomas, Chief Emeritus, U.S. Forest Service, and Professor, University of Montana)

Melinda Taylor

. . . a useful guide for people interested in protecting biodiversity on private lands. It is full of creative ideas for encouraging landowners to be good stewards of the land. Private land conservation is essential to the future of wildlife in America and the rest of the world. This book will advance the cause of conservation by giving landowners practical tools that can be easily implemented. (Melinda Taylor, Director, Environmental Defense Fund Landowner Conservation Assistance Program)

David E. Wesley

Wildlife Stewardship and Recreation on Private Lands offers practical solutions to some very real dilemmas that we face as resource managers. The global approach to evaluating the impact of mankind on our wild land resources, and the associated need and demand for sound stewardship practices are unique and valuable. The book is a timely work that offers some sound concepts about how we can work together in stewardship of these lands and in the process, offers a practical approach to gaining access to the 80 percent of our national wild lands that are privately owned. (David E. Wesley, Vice President, Marketing & Planned Giving, Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation)

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