There's a lot of hatefulness and vitriol here, and perhaps a lack of understanding the situation. I am not and will not engage with the former, and am speaking strictly on the subject of tahr control as a hunter with, I'd like to think, a little knowledge of the issue
The Himalayan Thar Control Plan which is the guiding document that DOC works under to plan tahr control sets the population limit at 10,000 tahr across the feral range. This is not a policy of extermination, and allows for controlling the population at an estimated level where ecological values and recreational hunting are both preserved. It is effectively a pretty good basis for a progressive policy of managing a game animal sustainably with conservation and recreation values in mind - certainly better than we have for any other species in NZ in that regard.
It appears that based on monitoring, tahr numbers across their range are currently well in excess of this - see the original linked ODT article with a population estimate of 35,000. Recreational hunting simply has not prevented numbers increasing - we are not shooting enough tahr, even alongside ongoing DOC/AATH offset control and commercial recovery. The massive numbers of uncontrolled tahr on pastoral lease land - Safari operations etc - which move onto public land don't help the situation. Tahr control is nothing new, it has been happening forever and is public knowledge - both by DOC doing SAD and AATH (heli hunting) operators shooting nannies for offsets - and volunteer culls on the ground through the Tahr Interest Group e.g. in the Landsborough etc. There is a policy to not shoot identifiable bulls (over ~2 years) during control operations - mentioned a couple of times in this publicly available document for example
https://www.doc.govt.nz/Documents/co...nd-2015-16.pdf
While we may not be happy that tahr are being culled, it has been ongoing for a long time, is nothing new, and is simply meeting the conditions of a pretty reasonable piece of management policy as far as hunting and conservation going together in New Zealand. This culling will not ruin recreational tahr hunting, there are a LOT of tahr out there. If we don't want DOC culling tahr, and if we don't want AATH - we need to shoot more ourselves. If we shot more nannies, there would be less tahr and it would be less justifiable for AATH to occur (the 5:1 nanny:bull culling offset requirement is a lot of free tahr control that justifies the activity).
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