American Black Bear America Long Thesis

Reducing the numbers is something of an illusion, of course, since protection after the hunt also means that the species will increase in number again and seek more habitat. The state could help control the problem by moves such as setting sufficient land aside for the bears, using whatever expertise can be developed to assure that there are sufficient crops in the region for the bears to survive, and any other plans that can be devised that would help reduce confrontations between bears and humans. In any case, the state has to stop using the hunt in the way it is used today, for most of the hunting has been taking place in areas where the bears are not 4 reqally a problem, while such actions might chase the bears from where they are not a problem to areas where they could become one. Problems could also develop with other jurisdictions if the bears in New Jersey are chased across the border to other states and become an issue.

Works Cited

...

"Encounters with Bears." The New York Times (17 Aug 2003), 14.
Harker, Dave and Diane C. Bates. "The Black Bear Hunt in New Jersey: A Constructionist Analysis of an Intractable Conflict." Society and Animals, Volume 15, Number 4 (2007), 329-352.

Johnson, Elizabeth a. And Michael W. Klemens. Nature in Fragments: The Legacy of Sprawl. New York: Columbia University Press, 2005.

Line, Les. "Growing Pains - as Their Numbers Multiply in Some States, Black Bears Are Creating Unusual Problems in Some Unlikely Places." National Wildlife (October-November 2001). November 28, 2008. http://www.questia.com/read/5000876064.

Open Season on Black Bear Population in New Jersey." USA Today (4 Dec 2005). November 27, 2008. http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2005-12-04-bears-nj_x.htm.

Pearce, Jeremy. "The Politics of Bears, as Tricky as the Biology." The New York Times (9…

Sources Used in Documents:

Works Cited

Granville, Kevin. "Encounters with Bears." The New York Times (17 Aug 2003), 14.

Harker, Dave and Diane C. Bates. "The Black Bear Hunt in New Jersey: A Constructionist Analysis of an Intractable Conflict." Society and Animals, Volume 15, Number 4 (2007), 329-352.

Johnson, Elizabeth a. And Michael W. Klemens. Nature in Fragments: The Legacy of Sprawl. New York: Columbia University Press, 2005.

Line, Les. "Growing Pains - as Their Numbers Multiply in Some States, Black Bears Are Creating Unusual Problems in Some Unlikely Places." National Wildlife (October-November 2001). November 28, 2008. http://www.questia.com/read/5000876064.
Open Season on Black Bear Population in New Jersey." USA Today (4 Dec 2005). November 27, 2008. http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2005-12-04-bears-nj_x.htm.


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