Morning Mike. :)
2nd cup of coffee in front of me and reading that report, so far its a good read.
Please don't twist my words Mike, and I would hope you don't "misunderstand", because the fact is I'm looking at the big picture. Conservation of all species, not looking at a vacuum, whats best for the entire ecosystem. Moose, Deer, rabbits, Fox, Beaver and more. What's "immaterial" is whether M/D numbers today are below what some think they should be, or roughly where "they should be". Lets go with your preposition, accept it without question. Deer numbers in C Ontario are where they should be.
Does logic not then say, predator numbers should be kept roughly where they are today as well. And thats ignoring the fact that for the past 15 years, Bear and Coyote have exploded into the area. And theres little natural checks. They are apex predators after all.................What fuzzy logic says further bans are needed. No, at best predator numbers should remain fairly stable/static......Not intentionally set up for expansion.
So
if preys number are where they "should be" (which is arguable) having been trending down
If predators numbers have been on the uptick and theres nothing to suggest thats going to change. In fact the opposite given Coyote expansion ( a non native species) and the propensity for cross breeding.
If studies show mortality from hunting is a non factor
What on gods green earth warrants more bans..A simple question that no-one can answer.
And all of that also ignores the jaws of the anvil wildlife in Ontario is in, between unchecked growth/expansion of Predators in C Ontario and Urban Sprawl in the S.