| Literature DB >> 29113041 |
Elizabeth Byrd1, John G Lee2, Nicole J Olynk Widmar3.
Abstract
Public acceptance of hunting and hunting practices is an important human dimension of wildlife management in the United States. Researchers surveyed 825 U.S. residents in an online questionnaire about their views of hunting, hunters, and hunting practices. Eighty-seven percent of respondents from the national survey agreed that it was acceptable to hunt for food whereas 37% agreed that it was acceptable to hunt for a trophy. Over one-quarter of respondents did not know enough about hunting over bait, trapping, and captive hunts to form an opinion about whether the practice reduced animal welfare. Chi-square tests were used to explore relationships between perceptions of hunters and hunting practices and demographics. Those who knew hunters, participated in hunting-related activities, visited fairs or livestock operations, or were males who had more favorable opinions on hunting. A logistic regression model showed that not knowing a hunter was a statistically significant negative predictor of finding it acceptable to hunt; owning a pet was statistically significant and negative for approving of hunting for a trophy.Entities:
Keywords: animal welfare; hunting; hunting practices; public acceptance; public perception
Year: 2017 PMID: 29113041 PMCID: PMC5704112 DOI: 10.3390/ani7110083
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Presentation of statistically significant differences in agreement with statements about hunting by demographic categories (α = 0.05 denoted by “*”; n = 825).
| Statements | Age | Gender | Pet Owner | Visited a Livestock Operation | Visited a Fair | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 45 and Older | Under 45 | Female | Male | No | Yes | Have not Visited | Have Visited | Have not Visited | Have Visited | |
| Hunting helps keep nature in balance. | 51 * | 44 * | 46 | 50 | 40 | 49 | 37 * | 58 * | 35 * | 55 * |
| Hunting is an important rural tradition. | 57 * | 44 * | 46 * | 56 * | 51 | 51 | 41 * | 60 * | 35 * | 59 * |
| I regard any kind of sport or recreational hunting as cruel to animals. | 34 | 31 | 34 | 32 | 28 * | 36 * | 33 | 32 | 30 | 35 |
| Hunters often ignore safety rules. | 41 * | 34 * | 42 * | 33 * | 30 * | 42 * | 38 | 37 | 37 | 38 |
| Hunting commonly results in a species becoming threatened or endangered. | 38 | 40 | 40 | 38 | 37 | 40 | 37 | 40 | 35 | 41 |
| Demand for hunting maintains wildlife habitat. | 38 | 32 | 33 | 37 | 34 | 36 | 26 * | 43 * | 27 * | 39 * |
| Hunting help control wildlife diseases by reducing animal populations. | 42 * | 31 * | 36 | 38 | 34 | 39 | 30 * | 43 * | 24 * | 43 * |
| Hunting provides funds used to manage other wildlife species that are not hunted. | 34 * | 48 * | 25 * | 37 * | 30 | 31 | 21 * | 40 * | 20 * | 36 * |
| Hunting helps reduce agricultural damage by reducing animal populations. | 53 * | 36 * | 39 * | 51 * | 43 | 46 | 34 * | 55 * | 29 * | 53 * |
| Hunting reduces the risk of dangerous vehicle collisions with wildlife by reducing animal populations. | 41 * | 32 * | 33 * | 41 * | 33 | 39 | 27 * | 46 * | 23 * | 44 * |
| Every person who hunts should have taken a hunters’ safety course. | 82 * | 55 * | 69 | 70 | 65 * | 72 * | 64 * | 75 * | 50 * | 79 * |
| Users of social media should be allowed to post pictures of the wild animals they have hunted/harvested. | 28 | 31 | 26 * | 34 * | 28 | 31 | 24 * | 35 * | 19 * | 44 * |
Note 1: In the interest of brevity, the values representing the percentage of individuals in each category who disagreed with that statement have been omitted. Because the values in each column must sum to 100, omitted variables can be calculated. For example, 51.3% of those age 45 and over agreed with the statement “Hunting helps keep nature in balance.” Thus, 48.7% of respondents age 45 and over did not agree (selected neutral or disagree) with the statement “Hunting helps keep nature in balance.” Note 2: The numbers appear in bold when there is a statistically significant difference at the 5% level. For example, when reading the “Hunting helps keep nature in balance” row, the first column (45 and older) is significantly different than the second column (under 45) at the 5% level.
Presentation of statistically significant differences in agreement with statements about hunting and participation in hunting-related activities (α = 0.05 denoted by “*”).
| Statement | Respondent Hunts | Respondent Knows a Hunter | Eat Game Meat Obtained through Hunting | Participate in Target Shooting | Help a Hunter Look for Wildlife Sign in Preparation for Hunting | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | |
| Hunting helps keep nature in balance. | 44 * | 73 * | 61 * | 25 * | 69 * | 29 * | 65 * | 38 * | 77 * | 41 * |
| Hunting is an important rural tradition. | 47 * | 74 * | 60 * | 34 * | 72 * | 32 * | 69 * | 41 * | 76 * | 45 * |
| I regard any kind of sport or recreational hunting as cruel to animals. | 34 | 27 | 31 | 37 | 28 * | 37 * | 32 | 34 | 27 | 34 |
| Hunters often ignore safety rules. | 39 * | 27 * | 35 | 41 | 33 * | 42 * | 32 * | 41 * | 32 | 39 |
| Hunting commonly results in a species becoming threatened or endangered. | 40 * | 29 * | 35 * | 46 * | 34 * | 43 * | 34 * | 42 * | 34 | 40 |
| Demand for hunting maintains wildlife habitat. | 31 * | 58 * | 44 * | 19 * | 51 * | 21 * | 49 * | 27 * | 65 * | 28 * |
| Hunting help control wildlife diseases by reducing animal populations. | 34 * | 56 * | 46 * | 21 * | 53 * | 23 * | 51 * | 29 * | 60 * | 31 * |
| Hunting provides funds used to manage other wildlife species that are not hunted. | 27 * | 53 * | 39 * | 16 * | 47 * | 16 * | 49 * | 20 * | 58 * | 24 * |
| Hunting helps reduce agricultural damage by reducing animal populations. | 41 * | 66 * | 54 * | 28 * | 65 * | 27 * | 62 * | 35 * | 70 * | 38 * |
| Hunting reduces the risk of dangerous vehicle collisions with wildlife by reducing animal populations. | 34 * | 55 * | 46 * | 21 * | 53 * | 23 * | 51 * | 28 * | 60 * | 31 * |
| Every person who hunts should have taken a hunters’ safety course. | 69 | 73 | 74 * | 61 * | 75 * | 65 * | 75 * | 66 * | 70 | 69 |
| Users of social media should be allowed to post pictures of the wild animals they have hunted/harvested. | 27 * | 48 * | 36 * | 17 * | 44 * | 17 * | 44 * | 21 * | 54 * | 23 * |
Note 1: In the interest of brevity, the values representing the percentage of individuals in each category who disagreed with that statement have been omitted. Because the values in each column must necessarily sum to 100, omitted variables can be calculated. For example, 43.6% of those who did not hunt agreed with the statement “Hunting helps keep nature in balance.” Thus, 56.4% of respondents who did not hunt did not agree (selected neutral or disagree) with the statement “Hunting helps keep nature in balance.” Note 2: The numbers appear in bold when there is a statistically significant difference at the 5% level. For example, when reading the “Hunting helps keep nature in balance” row, the first column (No) is significantly different than the second column (Yes) at the 5% level.
Presentation of statistically significant differences in hunting acceptance across demographic categories (α = 0.05 denoted by “*”).
| Statement | Reasons/Choices | Age | Gender | Education | Pet Ownership | Visited a Livestock Operation | Visited a Fair | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 45 And Older | Under 45 | Female | Male | Did not Graduate College | College Graduate | Non Pet Owner | Pet Owner | Have not Visited | Have Visited | Have not visited | Have Visited | ||
| Finds Reason to Hunt Acceptable | |||||||||||||
| Finds Reason Acceptable | Obtain Food | 88 | 85 | 86 | 88 | 80 | 87 | 86 | 87 | 83 * | 90 * | 79 * | 91 * |
| Trophy Hunting | 63 | 37 | 31 * | 43 * | 38 | 36 | 38 | 36 | 32 * | 42 * | 32 | 39 | |
| Wildlife Population Control | 74 | 69 | 69 * | 75 * | 68 | 73 | 72 | 71 | 66 * | 77 * | 63 * | 76 * | |
| Reduce Predator Population | 66 | 66 | 63 * | 70 * | 62 | 67 | 67 | 66 | 60 * | 72 * | 56 * | 71 * | |
| Control Crop Damage | 64 | 62 | 59 * | 68 * | 62 | 64 | 65 | 62 | 59 * | 67 * | 56 * | 67 * | |
| Agree Practices Reduce Animal Welfare | |||||||||||||
| Hunting over bait | Agree/Neutral/Disagree | 58 * | 72 * | 55 * | 75 * | 57 * | 68 * | 59 * | 68 * | 55 * | 74 * | 58 * | 69 * |
| I don’t know enough to respond | 42 * | 28 * | 45 * | 25 * | 43 * | 33 * | 41 * | 32 * | 45 * | 26 * | 43 * | 31 * | |
| Captive hunt | Agree/Neutral/Disagree | 63 * | 74 * | 59 * | 78 * | 61 * | 71 * | 60 * | 73 * | 58 * | 78 * | 60 * | 73 * |
| I don’t know enough to respond | 37 * | 26 * | 41 * | 22 * | 39 * | 29 * | 40 * | 27 * | 43 * | 22 * | 40 * | 27 * | |
| Hunting in wildlife preserve | Agree/Neutral/Disagree | 73 | 78 | 68 * | 82 * | 68 * | 78 * | 67 * | 79 * | 63 * | 86 * | 63 * | 81 * |
| I don’t know enough to respond | 28 | 22 | 32 * | 18 * | 32 * | 23 * | 33 * | 21 * | 37 * | 14 * | 37 * | 19 * | |
| Trapping | Agree/Neutral/Disagree | 71 * | 79 * | 69 * | 81 * | 68 * | 77 * | 67 * | 79 * | 63 * | 85 * | 64 * | 80 * |
| I don’t know enough to respond | 29 * | 21 * | 32 * | 19 * | 32 * | 23 * | 33 * | 21 * | 37 * | 15 * | 36 * | 20 * | |
| Use of dogs | Agree/Neutral/Disagree | 71 * | 77 * | 67 * | 81 * | 68 * | 76 * | 66 * | 78 * | 62 * | 85 * | 63 * | 79 * |
| I don’t know enough to respond | 29 * | 23 * | 33 * | 19 * | 32 * | 24 * | 34 * | 22 * | 38 * | 15 * | 37 * | 21 * | |
Note 1. In the interest of brevity, the values representing the percentage of individuals in each category who did not find the practice acceptable or who did not report the group having a high ability to ensure the welfare of hunt animals has been omitted. Because the values in each column must necessarily sum to 100, omitted variables can be calculated. For example, 88.2% of those age 45 and over reported finding hunting for food acceptable. Thus, 11.8% of respondents age 45 and over did not find hunting for food acceptable. Note 2: The numbers appear in bold when there is a statistically significant difference at the 5% level. Note 3: For the purposes of this table with respect to whether the respondent agreed that the practice reduces animal welfare, those respondents selecting very strongly agree, agree, neutral, disagree, and very strongly disagree that the surveyed practices reduce animal welfare were combined into a single category called Agree/Neutral/Disagree. Note 4: For the purposes of this table, those respondents who responded that a group had high ability or very high ability were combined into a single category and are presented in this table. The remaining categories were omitted for brevity and can be calculated according to Note 1.
Presentation of statistically significant differences in hunting acceptance across familiarity with hunting (α = 0.05 denoted by “*”).
| Statement | Reasons/Choice | Respondent Hunts | Respondent Knows a Hunter | Eat Game Meat Obtained through Hunting | Participate in Target Shooting | Help a Hunter Look for Wildlife Sign in Preparation for Hunting | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | ||
| Finds Reason to Hunt Acceptable | |||||||||||
| Finds Reason Acceptable | Obtain Food | 85 * | 97 * | 91 * | 79 * | 95 * | 79 * | 95 * | 82 * | 96 * | 85 * |
| Trophy Hunting | 33 * | 57 * | 41 * | 29 * | 44 * | 30 * | 45 * | 32 * | 57 * | 32 * | |
| Wildlife Population Control | 70 * | 84 * | 78 * | 60 * | 85 * | 60 * | 83 * | 65 * | 88 * | 68 * | |
| Reduce Predator Population | 63 * | 82 * | 72 * | 55 * | 77 * | 57 * | 77 * | 60 * | 80 * | 63 * | |
| Control Crop Damage | 61 * | 74 * | 68 * | 65 * | 74 * | 54 * | 72 * | 58 * | 80 * | 59 * | |
| Agree Practices Reduce Animal Welfare | |||||||||||
| Hunting over bait | Agree/Neutral/Disagree | 61 * | 90 * | 70 * | 56 * | 76 * | 55 * | 80 * | 56 * | 90 * | 59 * |
| I don’t know enough to respond | 39 * | 10 * | 30 * | 44 * | 24 * | 45 * | 20 * | 44 * | 10 * | 41 * | |
| Captive hunt | Agree/Neutral/Disagree | 65 * | 90 * | 75 * | 58 * | 80 * | 58 * | 83 * | 60 * | 90 * | 63 * |
| I don’t know enough to respond | 35 * | 10 * | 25 * | 42 * | 20 * | 42 * | 17 * | 40 * | 10 * | 37 * | |
| Hunting in wildlife preserve | Agree/Neutral/Disagree | 72 * | 92 * | 81 * | 64 * | 86 * | 65 * | 88 * | 67 * | 92 * | 71 * |
| I don’t know enough to respond | 28 * | 8 * | 19 * | 36 * | 14 * | 35 * | 12 * | 33 * | 9 * | 29 * | |
| Trapping | Agree/Neutral/Disagree | 72 * | 92 * | 81 * | 64 * | 86 * | 65 * | 87 * | 68 * | 90 * | 71 * |
| I don’t know enough to respond | 28 * | 8 * | 19 * | 36 * | 15 * | 35 * | 13 * | 33 * | 10 * | 29 * | |
| Use of dogs | Agree/Neutral/Disagree | 71 * | 93 * | 80 * | 64 * | 85 * | 65 * | 88 * | 66 * | 92 * | 69 * |
| I don’t know enough to respond | 30 * | 7 * | 21 * | 36 * | 16 * | 36 * | 12 * | 34 * | 8 * | 31 * | |
Note 1: In the interest of brevity, the values representing the percentage of individuals in each category who did not find the practice acceptable have been omitted. Because the values in each column must necessarily sum to 100, omitted variables can be calculated. For example, 81.5% of those who do not hunt found hunting for food acceptable. Thus, 18.5% of non-pet owners did not find hunting for food acceptable. Note 2: The numbers appear in bold when there is a statistically significant difference at the 5% level. In this table, all relationships are statistically significant at the 5% level. Note 3: For the purposes of this table, those respondents selecting very strongly agree, agree, neutral, disagree, and very strongly disagree that the surveyed practices reduce animal welfare were combined into a single category called Agree/Neutral/Disagree.
Logistic regression results for agreement with reasons to hunt.
| Variable | Respondent Finds the Following Reason Acceptable to Hunt: | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Food | Trophy | |||
| Coefficient (SE) | Marginal Effect (SE) | Coefficient (SE) | Marginal Effect (SE) | |
| −0.2827 | −0.0282 | −0.0003 | −0.0000 | |
| 0.1431 | 0.0141 | 0.4011 *** | 0.0924 | |
| 0.1562 | 0.0159 | −0.1687 | −0.0393 | |
| −0.1592 | −0.0155 | −0.3304 ** | −0.0770 | |
| −0.0515 | −0.0051 | 0.2952 * | 0.0678 | |
| 0.6558 *** | 0.0649 | 0.0481 | 0.0111 | |
| 10.235 ** | 0.0886 | 0.7746 *** | 0.1873 | |
| −0.6997 *** | −0.0752 | −0.3275 * | −0.0744 | |
| 10.788 | −0.6079 | |||
| −3000.656 | −5200.335 | |||
Note 1: For all variables the marginal effect is for discrete change of dummy variable from 0 to 1. Note 2: p-values: * p < 0.10, ** p < 0.05, *** p < 0.01.