By Mark Hall

The Substack article Focusing on Values is Key for Transforming Wildlife Management argues that wildlife agencies privilege “domination values” and marginalize “mutualist” perspectives. But the piece mischaracterizes how modern wildlife management works, overlooks the regulatory and ethical frameworks governing hunting and trapping, and ultimately advances an anti-hunting, anti-trapping agenda rather than a serious discussion about science or values. The article relies heavily on logical fallacies, which are errors in reasoning.
False Dichotomy and Straw Man Framing
The article opens by dividing the world into two camps:
- “Agency staff and traditional stakeholders (hunters and trappers)”
- “Wildlife advocates”
This is a false dichotomy. Wildlife management involves Indigenous Peoples, landowners, ecologists, municipalities, recreationists, conservation NGOs, and the broader public, not two monolithic tribes.
It also constructs a straw man so the author can argue against a made-up position, implying hunters and agencies uniformly argue that “significant hunting and/or trapping is sufficient” to protect populations. Agencies routinely reduce quotas, close seasons, and adjust harvest frameworks based on data. An academic should know better than to flatten complex governance into caricatures.
False Balance and Oversimplification
The article claims both sides say they want “science-based management,” yet conflict persists. This is false balance, implying equal validity or equal flaws. It also oversimplifies wildlife management, which is shaped by:
- Law and regulation
- Economics and culture
- Ecology and population dynamics
- Public safety
- Indigenous rights
- Funding mechanisms
- Public trust doctrine
Reducing all of this to “values” is not analysis it is oversimplification.
Misrepresenting Agency Values
The article claims agencies manage wildlife “primarily to serve the domination values of traditional stakeholders.” This is factually incorrect.
Modern North American wildlife management is built on explicit ethical and conservation frameworks, including:
- Fair Chase: ethical hunting that respects the animal, the landscape, and the public
- Humane Take: equipment restrictions, trap-check intervals, weapon regulations, and prohibitions on waste
- Conservation Principles: conservative quotas, mandatory reporting, adaptive management, and harvest closures when uncertainty is high
- Fairness: Equal access to everyone to participate in hunting, trapping and fishing
These are not “domination values.” They are ethical values codified in law.
Hasty Generalization and Appeal to Ignorance
The article claims advocates believe monitoring is insufficient and therefore “we should reduce hunting or trapping as much as possible.” This is a hasty generalization: not all advocates hold this view.
It is also an appeal to ignorance:
“In the absence of better data… reduce hunting as much as possible.”
Lack of data is not evidence of harm. The precautionary principle is not a substitute for science.
Ignoring Regulatory Asymmetry
The article frames hunting and trapping as loosely regulated consumptive uses while presenting non-consumptive uses as morally superior. Yet:
- Hunting and trapping are regulated by seasons, quotas, bag limits, weapon restrictions, geographic closures, mandatory training, licensing, and reporting
- These regulations exist for safety, ethics, and ecological sustainability
- By contrast, wildlife photography, hiking, wildlife viewing, and recreation, the activities the article elevates, are largely unregulated, despite causing disturbance, displacement, and habitat degradation
The article never acknowledges this asymmetry.
Cherry Picking and Confirmation Bias
The author highlights only the weaknesses of agency data while presenting only the strengths of advocate claims. This is cherry picking: selectively presenting information to support a predetermined narrative. It is also confirmation bias, ignoring evidence of stable or increasing populations, recovery and protection of non-game wildlife species, adaptive management, and long-term monitoring frameworks. This is advocacy writing, not academic balance.
Ignoring Who Funds the Science
The article repeatedly critiques agencies’ population monitoring methods and claims that “better data is needed.” But it omits a critical fact:
The overwhelming majority of wildlife population data in North America is funded by hunters and trappers through license fees, tags, excise taxes, and conservation stamps.
If the author wants more data, the funding mechanism already exists, and it comes from the very people she marginalizes.
Misrepresenting Who Wildlife Management Serves
The article implies agencies manage wildlife primarily for hunters and trappers. But:
- Only a small fraction of wildlife species is hunted or trapped.
- Agencies manage hundreds of non-game species, endangered species, migratory birds, amphibians, reptiles, pollinators, and entire ecosystems through additional mechanisms that include environmental impact assessments for major projects and the enforcement of laws and regulations.
- Habitat conservation, land acquisition, and restoration, funded heavily by hunters, benefit everyone, including people who never pick up a firearm or trap.
The article’s framing erases this reality.
Appeal to Popularity and Minority Rights
The author argues that because more people hold “mutualist values” than “domination values,” agencies should shift their priorities accordingly. This is a dangerous argument.
In a pluralistic society, minority rights do not disappear because a majority holds a different value set. Hunters and trappers are a minority group, but:
- Their activities are legal
- Their activities are regulated
- Their activities are ethical under established frameworks
- Their activities fund conservation for everyone
Appealing to majority sentiment to restrict minority rights is not “values-based management.” It is majoritarianism.
Activist Framing, Not Academic Work
The pattern throughout the article is unmistakable:
- Moralized language (“domination values”)
- Binary framing
- Delegitimizing hunters and trappers
- Appeals to majority sentiment
- Calls for legislative restructuring
- Minimizing the role of science
- Elevating emotional claims over evidence
This is animal-rights advocacy, not wildlife management scholarship. An academic should know better. You cannot manage wildlife ethically or sustainably without population data, harvest models, demographic monitoring, and adaptive frameworks. Suggesting otherwise is not a values argument; it is an argument against evidence-based management.
A Political Argument to Marginalize Hunters and Trappers
The article repeatedly:
- Labels hunters and trappers as “domination-oriented”
- Frames their motivations as consumption-driven
- Suggests their values are less legitimate
- Argues their rights should be reduced because they are a minority
- Calls for legislative mandates to shift agency priorities away from them
This is not a neutral values discussion. It is a political argument to marginalize hunters and trappers, and it has little to do with science-based wildlife management.
Conclusion
Wildlife management is, and always has been, a blend of values, ethics, economics, law, and science. But the article’s framing is misleading. It ignores the ethical foundations of hunting and trapping, the regulatory systems that govern them, the conservation funding they provide, and the minority rights they embody.
Most importantly, it presents a false narrative: that hunters and trappers dominate wildlife management, when they fund, support, and enable the conservation of far more wildlife than they harvest.
The article relies on logical fallacies, ideological framing, and mischaracterizations to advance a political agenda that seeks to marginalize a minority group whose contributions sustain the very wildlife the author claims to defend.
If the goal is truly inclusive wildlife management, the path forward is not to diminish one group’s rights, ethics, and contributions. It is to recognize that all citizens, consumptive and non-consumptive, benefit from a system built on science, sustainability, and shared responsibility.