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Showing posts from September 12, 2025

Joplin Urban Bowhunting: What Happens When the Arrow Misses

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  A comparative look at Missouri’s urban hunting programs, the risks of wounded wildlife, and what residents must prepare for as Joplin, MO legalizes bowhunting within city limits.   Introduction: Why This Article Matters Autumn in Joplin, MO is a season of quiet migration. The leaves turn, the air sharpens, and the deer return moving through creek beds, fence lines, and wooded corridors that have shaped their patterns for generations. It’s a time when late-born fawns still trail behind their mothers, learning how to forage among fallen acorns and shelter beneath thinning brush.   But this year, the season carries a new risk. As Joplin, MO moves forward with its urban bowhunting ordinance, residents deserve to know what similar programs have produced in other Missouri cities. While officials cite population control and safety, the reality is more complicated and often more painful. This article examines the outcomes of urban hunting programs in Columbia, Bran...

Urban Hunting in Joplin: My Perspective on Policy Community Safety

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  "Opinion: Joplin’s urban hunting ordinance creates chaos, trauma, and risk for families controlled hunts offer safer, ethical alternatives." Original photo by Susang6 Whether you’re a resident, hunter, or city official,  I believe this issue isn’t just about wildlife it’s about  responsible policy, neighborhood trust, and environmental health. In my view, Joplin’s urban hunting ordinance allows bowhunters to harvest deer within city limits without the oversight, trauma safeguards, or disposal protocols that should accompany such activity.  What happens if the arrow misses will that deer bolt into communities before collapsing on a residents lawn? A quiet neighborhood would then become  the backdrop for a wounded animal’s final moments. For some families, this isn’t wildlife management it’s trauma. They don’t see a sport.  Young children may view it as Bambi’s mom passing away on their lawn. Bowhunting may be a tradition for some, but in urban zone...

CWD Risks from Field-Dressed Deer That Look Healthy

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  Even “healthy-looking” deer can be infected with CWD and carry prions. Here’s how field dressing spreads CWD across neighborhoods, soil, and scavengers. At first glance, a deer may appear healthy alert posture, glossy coat, no visible symptoms. But beneath that surface, it could be carrying Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) , a fatal neurological illness caused by prions: misfolded proteins that resist breakdown and remain infectious in the environment for years.  This article explores what happens when a field-dressed deer is left exposed on city land, or private property that allowed bowhunters. How that decision can trigger a chain reaction of contamination, scavenger behavior, and predator attraction. Readers will learn how prions spread, which species act as unexpected vectors, and why containment not just herd thinning is essential for responsible wildlife management in urban zones like Joplin, Missouri.   Prion Contamination: What Happens When a Carcass Is Left B...