In the United States, hunting licenses and hunting seasons are a means by which the population of game animals is maintained. Each season, a hunter is allowed to kill a certain amount of wild animals, determined both by species and sex. If the population seems to have surplus females, hunters are allowed to take more females during that hunting season. If the population is below what is desired, hunters may not be permitted to hunt that particular species, or only hunt a restricted number of males. Populations of game animals such as
elk may be informally culled if they begin to excessively eat winter food set out for domestic cattle herds. In such instances the rancher will inform hunters that they may hunt on their property in order to thin the wild herd to controllable levels. These efforts are aimed to counter excessive depletion of the winter feed supplies. Other managed culling instances involve extended issuance of extra hunting licenses, or the inclusion of additional "special hunting seasons" during harsh winters or overpopulation periods, governed by state fish and game agencies. Culling for population control is common in wildlife management, particularly on
African
game farms and
Australian national parks. In the case of very large animals such as
elephants, adults are often targeted. Their orphaned young, easily captured and transported, are then relocated to other reserves. Culling is controversial in many African countries, but reintroduction of the practice has been recommended in recent years for use at the
Kruger National Park in
South Africa, which has experienced a swell in its elephant population since culling was banned in 1995.
Arguments against wildlife culling Culling acts as a strong selection force and can therefore impact the
population genetics of a species. For example, culling based on specific traits, such as size, can enforce
directional selection and remove those traits from the population. This can have long-term effects on the
genetic diversity of a population.
Animal rights activists argue that killing animals for any reason (including hunting) is cruel and unethical.
Birds Some bird species are culled when their populations impact upon human property, business or recreational activity, disturb or modify habitats or otherwise impact species of conservation concern. Cormorants are culled in many countries due to their impact on commercial and recreational fisheries and habitat modification for nesting and
guano deposition. They are culled by shooting and the smothering of eggs with oil. Another example is the culling of
silver gulls in order to protect the chicks of the vulnerable
banded stilt at ephemeral inland salt lake breeding sites in South Australia. The gulls were culled using bread laced with a narcotic substance. In the Australian states of Tasmania and South Australia,
Cape Barren geese are culled to limit damage to crops and the fouling of waterholes. Cape Barren Geese remain one of the rarest geese in the world, though much of their habitat is now regarded as secure.
Seals In
South Australia, the recovery of the state's native population of New Zealand fur seals (
Arctocephalus forsteri) after severe depletion by sealers in the 1800s has brought them into conflict with the fishing industry. This has prompted members of Parliament to call for
seal culling in South Australia. The State Government continues to resist the pressure and as of July 2015, the animals remain protected as listed Marine Mammals under the state's
National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972.
Sharks Shark culling occurs in four locations :
New South Wales,
Queensland,
KwaZulu-Natal and
Réunion. Between 1950 and 2008, 352 tiger sharks and 577 great white sharks were killed in the
nets in New South Wales—also during this period, a total of 15,135 marine animals were caught and killed in the nets, including whales, turtles, rays, dolphins, and dugongs. In a 30-year period up to early 2017, more than 33,000 sharks were killed in
KwaZulu-Natal's shark-killing program—during the same 30-year period, 2,211 turtles, 8,448 rays, and 2,310 dolphins were killed. In 2014, a controversial policy was introduced by the
Western Australian state government which became known as the
Western Australian shark cull. Baited hooks known as
drum lines were to be set over several consecutive summers to catch and kill otherwise protected
great white sharks. The policy's objective was to protect users of the marine environment from fatal shark attack. Thousands of people protested against its implementation, claiming that it was indiscriminate, inhumane and worked against scientific advice the government had previously received. Seasonal setting of drum lines was abandoned in September 2014 after the program failed to catch any great white sharks, instead catching 172 other
elasmobranchii, mostly
tiger sharks.
Deer White-tailed deer (
Odocoileus virginianus) have been becoming an issue in suburbs across the United States due to large population increases. This is thought to be caused mainly by the
extirpation of most of their major predators in these areas. In response to these population booms, different management approaches have been taken to decrease their numbers mainly in the form of culls. Culls of deer are often partnered with exclusions with fencing and also administering contraceptives. The effectiveness of these deer culls has been debated and often criticized as only a temporary fix to the larger problem of deer overpopulation and argue that the use of culling will increase fertility of remaining deer by reducing competition. Those in favor of the culls argue that they can be used to combat the
selection pressure that is imposed by hunting that creates smaller antler and body sizes in deer. People in favor of the culls recommend that they not be random and actively select for smaller individuals and bucks with smaller antlers, specifically "button bucks" or bucks with only spiked antler in their first year as opposed to forked antlers. Culling of deer can also have benefits in the form of disease prevention and in places that the white-tailed deer is an invasive species such as New Zealand culling of deer has added benefits for native species. Diseases are
density dependent factors and decreases in the density of the deer populations through culling causes diseases, such as
chronic wasting disease and
Lyme disease, to spread less quickly and effectively. ==Zoos==