Today's Tennessee River Valley Hunters Benefit from Past Conservation Efforts
November 20 marks the opening day of gun hunting deer season in the Tennessee River Valley. The long held tradition of a Thanksgiving hunt continues today because of past conservation efforts of sportsmen.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Nov. 20, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- When European settlers moved into the Tennessee Valley, they found plentiful wild game animals, and pristine rivers teeming with fish.
The state harbored healthy populations of waterfowl, quail, wild turkeys, whitetail deer, elk, bison, and black bears. Deer, bison, elk and wild turkeys were important food sources for Native Americans; their hides and feathers used for food, clothing, tools, and ceremonial purposes.
Early Conservation Efforts
People became alarmed about these declines as early as 1870, when the Tennessee legislature adopted laws to protect rivers from overfishing. In 1887, the legislature prohibited the exportation of wild game, and in 1889 outlawed market hunting of bobwhite quail. In 1903, the General Assembly established the Game, Fish, and Forestry Department, which made all game and fish property of the state, and required hunting licenses for the first time in 1907.
In 1925, land developers and fishermen at Reelfoot Lake clashed over access to that fishery, leading to the establishment of the lake as a state game and fish preserve, the first step toward the creation of state parks in Tennessee. In 1936 the 625,350-acre Cherokee National Forest was established, and in 1926, President Calvin Coolidge signed legislation to create the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP).
By 1937, Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act -- the brainchild of the country's hunters and anglers -- into law, establishing a manufacturers' excise tax on sporting arms and ammunition to generate revenue for wildlife conservation. Since its inception, more than $14 billion has gone to buying wildlife habitat and reintroducing imperiled species.
In 1946 outdoor writers, sportsmen and conservationists created the Tennessee Conservation League (TCL), now the Tennessee Wildlife Federation. The Game and Fish Department, a division of the state Conservation Department, was frequently corrupted by political influences then, often overruling scientific management.
The organization's efforts to take the politics out of wildlife management culminated in the legislature's creation in 1949 of the Tennessee Fish & Wildlife Commission, which receives no funding from the General Fund, and operates entirely on license fees, fines, permits, leases or federal allocations. The League's efforts were watershed events that led the state into modern scientific wildlife management.
Wildlife Success Stories
All of the above-mentioned efforts have had a tremendous impact on wildlife conservation in the Tennessee River Valley. Today there are almost 5,000 bears distributed across east and middle Tennessee, and deer hunters harvested 159,935 deer during the 2021-22 hunting season (deer populations now number in the millions). Tennessee hunters harvested 40,105 wild turkeys during the spring season alone in 2021. Unfortunately, grouse and quail are still declining, despite conservationists' efforts to restore these populations, due in part to loss of habitat from human development.
All these efforts have created one most successful wildlife management stories of the century
The TRV Stewardship Council is a nonprofit comprised of destinations committed to environmental stewardship, social responsibility, and economic prosperity within the Tennessee River Valley. The mapguide is supported by the generosity of the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), volunteer members consisting of Chambers of Commerce, Convention & Visitors Bureaus, businesses, and individuals. Learn more by visiting the web site at http://www.ExploreTRV.com.
Media Contact
Etta Pettijohn, TRV Stewardship Council, Inc, 865-585-0811, [email protected]
SOURCE TRV Stewardship Council, Inc
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