Invasive Axis Deer: A Sourcing Story

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024
  • Exotic, invasive axis deer were introduced to the island of Maui in 1959. Without natural predators, the axis deer population exploded, devastating fragile Hawaiian ecosystems both on land and in the sea. Jacob and Ku’ulani Muise, the founders of Maui Nui, came up with a unique solution: managing the axis deer by eating them. Today, Maui Nui provides lean, nutritious venison to island communities and to Patagonia Provisions for our new venison snack sticks.

Komentáře • 27

  • @robertsmithjr.5839
    @robertsmithjr.5839 Před 2 měsíci

    Great video

  • @808kahulaa
    @808kahulaa Před 2 lety +13

    Interesting how Oahu has same problem with the runoff but no deer… no way it could be the development and overcrowding… I think this is a great resource but let’s not make Axis deer the scapegoat. Less people means less runoff, plain and simple

    • @hawaiihuntingterriers7503
      @hawaiihuntingterriers7503 Před 2 lety +1

      Rather have deer than grow a bunch of trees you can't eat.

    • @kylegreenwood469
      @kylegreenwood469 Před 8 měsíci +4

      For sure I think it’s about federal grants. Funny they never mention pigs who do way more damage than deer.

  • @bradgantt1818
    @bradgantt1818 Před 2 lety +3

    What a brilliant and thoughtful solution to a challenging problem.

  • @caseypittman9950
    @caseypittman9950 Před rokem +11

    These people are more concerned about the well-being of the invasive deer than the island's ecology. Seriously, they want them to be seen as a food source rather than an invasive species? It's not like they can't be seen as both. These deer are trampling ground bird nests, eating endangered plants, and likely help the spread of invasive plants. If they value the island and the deer, keep the deer on a ranch rather than freely stripping the island.

    • @fernandomedina697
      @fernandomedina697 Před rokem +1

      Ranchers want to get paid per axis deer killed so that doesnt help either

    • @ripperrex7883
      @ripperrex7883 Před 3 měsíci

      @@fernandomedina697 It's a problem they love to have lol

  • @wildguy4773
    @wildguy4773 Před rokem +4

    How to stop axis invasion
    Me:simple, bring their natural predator from India, tigers 😂😂😂

  • @holdthetruthhostage
    @holdthetruthhostage Před rokem +4

    Why Not Put Them on the menu

  • @TurboEZ666
    @TurboEZ666 Před rokem +4

    Sheeet it’s just a big farm in my eyes harvest em we want em!

  • @MrJara1018
    @MrJara1018 Před rokem +5

    Super simple ….. hunt them and eat them.

    • @samanthagaboo5610
      @samanthagaboo5610 Před 4 měsíci

      It's taking me awhile to catch on. So hes using the words like we "process" them, and we "source" them. So basically theyre just hunting them at night? And attempting to curb the population that way, yes?

  • @RayGar-jd1wh
    @RayGar-jd1wh Před rokem +1

    These people trying to save the 🌎🌍 but make issues out of blessings

  • @STEEZLUHWEEZ
    @STEEZLUHWEEZ Před rokem +1

    Facts were wrong they were in maui since the 1800s

  • @GetRocStar
    @GetRocStar Před rokem

    This place most be a hunters paradise

  • @thomaspannkuk655
    @thomaspannkuk655 Před rokem

    Thats a bark not their scream. They are different.

  • @renravvarn8858
    @renravvarn8858 Před 11 měsíci

    Hell I wish I could find one

  • @ivensimakoloyi957
    @ivensimakoloyi957 Před 2 lety

    To end the problem of dead deers, consider introducing vultures to be eat carcasses

  • @ivensimakoloyi957
    @ivensimakoloyi957 Před 2 lety +1

    Vultures can be introduced to be eating dead carcasses

  • @RayGar-jd1wh
    @RayGar-jd1wh Před rokem

    That's so ignorant it's more of a blessing than a problem...

  • @j_toledo419
    @j_toledo419 Před 2 lety

    Maybe introduce African Wild Dogs (Painted African Dogs). Maybe a collared pack 5-6 of them would help within 6 months to a year

    • @dakotanichols8533
      @dakotanichols8533 Před rokem +2

      A good thought, but that would probably endanger native bird populations