Only 5,200 of This Animal Exist on Earth | John Nores
There are only 5,200 Tule elk left on Earth and every single one of them lives in California. To keep them alive, retired game warden John Nores deploys like a sniper through the hills above Silicon Valley, hunting the coyotes that prey on vulnerable calves during calving season. It is one of the strangest paradoxes in wildlife management: you have to kill animals to save an endangered species.
John Nores spent over two decades as a California game warden fighting Mexican drug cartels and protecting wildlife across some of the most biodiverse terrain in North America. He explains why hunters are the true conservationists, how predator management works on California cattle ranches, and why a single steelhead trout migrating off the Santa Cruz coast carries a federal value of $35,000 to $40,000.
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@Corteum
May 20, 2026 at 11:53 pm
And yet, if humans weren't around, animal populations would balance themselves out.?
@tmacnavyseal4789
May 20, 2026 at 11:53 pm
I like hunting humans 8 billion is to much for this planet
@NotMolly-jf2rh
May 20, 2026 at 11:53 pm
BULL. In theory only. And assuming only legal hunting. Ant trapping and trophy hunting should be illegal because they are cruel and pointless.