Poaching
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Poaching is illegal hunting or fishing. It may be illegal because:
- The game or fish is out of season.
- The poacher does not possess an appropriate license.
- The animal is on restricted land.
- The plant is on restricted land.
- The right to hunt this animal is claimed by somebody.
- The means used are illegal (for example, baiting a field while hunting quail, or using spotlights to stun or paralyze deer).
- The animal or fish is protected by law or that it has been listed as extinct animal or an Endangered Animal (see for example the Endangered Species Act for the USA)
- The animal or plant has been tagged by a researcher
It is currently estimated that the illegal wildlife trade is worth 10 billion US dollars.
Note that only wild animals can be poached. Stealing or killing domestic animals is theft ("cattle rustling"), not poaching.
Plant poaching is also on the rise. A prominent example is the removal of Ginseng [1] growing in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
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[edit] Historical aspects
In the Middle Ages, poaching was a form of hunting unique to the poor, especially during the eras when hunting was a privilege reserved to landowners and the nobility. In the 16th century, killing a deer (a royal animal) was punishable by death. The poor typically hunted small animals such as rabbits (using snares and ferrets). Genuine hunting required weapons, considerable skill and spare time, which the average peasant simply did not have. A peasant was far more likely to kill the lord's deer to protect his fields. Still, killing the deer was considered poaching, no matter for what cause. Outlaws could support themselves by hunting, even though they could get into even more trouble doing so. In the medieval ages, wild animals were considered a major source of food because of several famines which diminished other sources of food. This led to an increase in poaching.
[edit] Modern issues
There have been national and international actions taken against certin kinds of poaching and hunting. In 1989 there was an international ban against Ivory hunting.
[edit] Addressing the problem
Some cash-strapped game wardens have made use of robotic decoy animals placed in high visibility areas to draw out poachers for arrest after the "animals" get shot. [2].
[edit] Modern terminology
As of at least 1990 the verb is sometimes used to refer to the act of hiring employees who are already employed by another company (especially a competitor), orchestrated by a recruiter referred to as a "headhunter". Poaching is illegal in most places.
[edit] See also
- Black Act
- Endangered species
- WildAid
- Night Poaching Act 1828
- Wildlife Enforcement Monitoring System (WEMS)
- Danny, the Champion of the World
- Kevin Thompson