TWRA clear cutting Bridgestone/Firestone WMA

Once again, The T.W.R.A. plans to embark on what probably will turn out to be their biggest blunder ever. The agency has plans to deforest thousands of acres of perfectly viable wooded habitat; all for the presumption to re-introduce more Bobwhite Quail into The Bridgestone Centennial Wilderness Area in White County Tennessee. There’s already about 3 square miles of land that was burned to create habitat for these birds. I believe it was somewhere around 1200 birds that were released, but very few remain. The T.W.R.A.  did nothing to reduce the Coyote population first, as quail are ground roosting birds and become easy prey for the night time predator. Also, rather than allowing these domestically raised Quail to become acclimated to their new environment, at least for the first year of introduction, The T.W.R.A. decided to allow them to be hunted just a few months after being released. 

 This is a direct violation of The T.W.R.A.’s mission parameters set forth by legislation when the agency was formed. Those mission parameters are as described on the T.W.R.A.’s website as follows: “The Mission of The Tennessee Wildlife Management Agency is to preserve, conserve, manage, protect, and enhance the wildlife of the state and their habitats for the use, benefit, and enjoyment of the citizens of Tennessee, and its visitors”. This mission does not include destruction of perfectly viable wildlife habitat, all for the prospect of creating some sort of quail sanctuary.

The T.W.R.A. has already failed miserably in The Bridgestone W.M.A. with regards to the big game populations there. A quick look at the agency’s own Game Harvest Statistics reveals abysmal findings. Rather than “Enhancing” the wildlife there, you would think they are deliberately exterminating it. Not only have the harvest numbers stagnated over the past ten years, they’ve declined steadily. The Wild Turkey Harvests show that only one bird for almost every two square miles was harvested. Whitetail deer Harvest numbers are pitiful also at one deer per about every two hundred acres.

There is only one barely justifiable reason to do what The T.W.R.A. has recently proposed; if the project was to save a federally endangered species. Last time I checked, the Bobwhite Quail was not on that list. The problem here is the agency itself. The designation “Agency” gives The T.W.R.A. certain protection from public scrutiny, because the agency has no obligation to report anything to the paying public that funds it. It’s kind of like a subcontractor. The T.W.R.A. only needs to file an annual report to the office of The Governor that it is adequately managing the state’s wildlife. The agency hangs on a thin thread that leads directly to The Governor. With the stroke of a pen through Executive Order, The T.W.R.A. can be dismantled, and the duties and responsibilities could easily be assigned to The Department of Environmental Conservation. It is my opinion that that would be the best course of action to both reign in the slaphappy misguided agency’s failed track record and insure accountability to those that pay for its services. As a department of The Government of The State it would be constitutionally bound to serve “We The People” rather than fulfill its own selfish aspirations.

Bob White Quail program in Tennessee

I understand there is a cooperative study being done in the Bridgestone wildlife management area in White County Tennessee. It consists of the annual burning in the WMA. What the objective of the study is, however, is  unclear to me. The signs posted in the WMA state that areas will be burned in the fall in cooperation with the University of Tennessee.

I do know that over the past several years the WMA has burned large areas every spring,  and not in the fall. I am a conservationist as well as an outdoorsman and a hunter.

I have seen a drastic decline in animals and birds in my own back yard in recent years. I decided to look into the matter further and indeed, when checking the TWRA’s website with regard to animals (big game) Turkey and deer particularly there has been a severe decline in game checking statistics, an approximate 60% decline in turkey.

In my opinion, this is almost equivalent to a genocide or extreme cull of these species. I’m sure that this affects not only turkey but all other ground forging and nesting birds including quail, Pheasant, grouse and woodcock.

I have tried to impress my views on this matter by contacting the TWRA. They responded with irrelevant comparison to native plains Indians burning lands and boasted of belonging to a national burn council. As an outdoorsman, hunter for over 40 years, their analysis of ground cover being bad for these birds is completely false.

They also told me that the lands are only burned in a controlled rotational manner, ever few years. This is also incorrect. The lands are burned every spring when these birds are propagating (nesting-mating.) I have witnessed repetitive and consistent destruction of these areas year after year since 2009.

I was told quail were introduced or stocked on the WMA, but most of the birds are being forced into adjacent private land. I have no objection to the birds’ presence, but have to question the management practice of the WMA. Surely with over 10, 000 acres of land there could be adequate habitat if properly managed.

I have noticed the forage plot planted for the wildlife but it is planted within 50 feet of a public road where vehicles travel at 45-50 MPH.

The forage is approximately 10 feet wide by over one mile and  alongside the roadway. I have had a personal experience of quail birds exiting the WMA and hitting my windshield. I slowed my vehicle enough however that I don’t think the birds were harmed.

Either these burn practices are not being properly conducted, are not effective at all, or must certainly are having a negative effect on the wildlife populations. I will continue contacting as many state and federal and private wildlife conservation organizations until this is address.