Francais | English | Espanõl

List of politically endorsed extermination of animals

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Historically, there have been cases where the extermination of animal species has been politically endorsed because the animals have been considered harmful. In some cases the animals have been hunted because the animals present a danger to human lives, at other times they have been hunted because they are harmful to human interests such as livestock farming.

In a number of cases, such government endorsed hunting has led to the endangerment or outright extinction of the species.

Contents

[edit] Thylacine

  • The thylacine was an Tasmanian predator which was responsible for a significant number of attacks on unconfined livestock, leading to a public sentiment of hostility against the species. A bounty of between 6/- (for less than ten kills) and 10/- (for each kill beyond ten) on the thylacine was established by the Van Diemen's Land Co in 1836. In 1888 the government introduced a bounty of £1 for each adult scalp, and 10/- per juvenile, and a number of sheep farmers offered similar rewards. The subsequent slaughter of the animals was a key factor in their extinction. <ref>The Natural History of Thylacinus Cynocephalus</ref>

[edit] Tiger

[edit] Caspian Tiger

  • In the first decade of the 20th Century the Russian government declared that there is no place for tigers in Central Asia and Caucasus. The Russian army was tasked with the extermination of all tigers in the Caspian Sea area so that farmers could move in. It is unknown whether the Caspian Tiger is entirely extinct since there are some reports of sightings in Afghanistan. <ref>The Caspian Tiger</ref>

[edit] South China Tiger

[edit] Wolf

[edit] See also

[edit] References

<references/>

Personal tools