Toronto Star

Tories’ plan for cormorants is unethical

-

Re Why are cormorants in the Tories’ crosshairs?, Walkom, Dec. 10

Hunting in our society is a sport that is guided by a code of conduct — for instance, that it does not occur at a time of year when young could be left abandoned to starve or be preyed upon (or, as is supposedly the case in the spring bear hunt, precaution­s are taken to avoid killing a mother that has cubs).

There’s the concept of fair chase — that the animal has a reasonable chance of escape.

And an ethical hunter fully uses the animal, leaving nothing to waste.

The Conservati­ves’ plan for double-crested cormorants is anything but ethical.

It will allow hunting of cormorants during breeding season — shooting birds while they are sit- ting on eggs or tending to chicks — and will suspend a provision of the Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Act that prohibits leaving meat to spoil.

Oscar Wilde’s quip about a fox hunt, “the unspeakabl­e in full pursuit of the uneatable,” is an apt descriptio­n of this provincial proposal — except, this is not a hunt, there is no pursuit when it comes to killing birds on the nest.

This is just cruel, and pointless — the government’s own posting on the Environmen­tal Registry of Ontario states that the Great Lakes population of double-crested cormorants has stabilized or declined slightly.

Comment on the issue is being sought at ero.ontario.ca/notice/013-4124. Kate Harries, Elmvale, Ont.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada