Deer can swim, but not very far. So when they showed up for the first time on the Big Island of Hawaii, mystified residents wondered how they got there. The island is some 30 miles southeast of Maui, where deer are plentiful. Hawaii wildlife authorities think someone dropped a few deer from a helicopter on the island’s northern tip. And tracks along the southern coast indicate deer were pushed into the ocean from a boat and forced to paddle ashore. Whether they arrived by air or sea, wildlife managers want to eradicate them to avoid a repeat of the destruction seen on other islands where deer ate through vineyards, avocado farms and forests where endangered species live. Officials estimate there are 100 deer on the northern and southern ends of the Big Island. A government-funded group is leading efforts to get rid of them before they breed. “They didn’t get here by themselves, so the people who brought them over did so and have done it many times,” said Jan Schipper, the group’s project manager. People have reported seeing deer on the Big Island for a while, but it wasn’t until a motion-sensor camera captured a photo of one last year that their presence was confirmed. Axis deer, called chital in their native India, are similar in size to whitetail deer found in the continental U.S. Tigers and leopards keep axis deer numbers reasonable in India, but the deer population is growing 20 percent to 30 percent annually in Hawaii because there aren’t any natural predators — except for humans. The deer first came to Hawaii in the 1860s as a gift from Hong Kong to the monarch who ruled at the time, King Kamehameha V. They were first taken to Molokai Island. In the 1950s, some deer were taken to Maui as part of post-World War II efforts to introduce mammals to different places and increase hunting opportunities for veterans, said Steven Hess, a wildlife biologist with the U.S. Geological Survey. Biologists believed they could improve the environment by introducing species that didn’t naturally exist, he said. But that experiment has had devastating, unforeseen consequences in Hawaii, where plants and animals evolved in isolation over millions of years and lack natural defenses against introduced species. In Maui, deer have caused $1 million in damage during the past two years for farmers, ranchers and resorts, according to a county survey. Officials spent half that amount during the same time trying to eradicate the animals. On Lanai, deer that eat everything from Hawaii’s native ebony tree, the lama, to a native olive tree and a now-extinct mint helped turn a rich native forest into a desert-like landscape so desolate that people compare it to the moon. Big Island hunters like Tony Sylvester welcome the axis deer as a new source of meat. These hunters, who hunt to supplement their diet, say the deer should stay because the gift to the former king was for all of Hawaii. Sylvester suspects other hunters brought the deer from nearby islands to retaliate against government agencies and conservationists for converting vast tracts of hunting ground to forest restoration. He said he understands the concern for the environment and the need to protect the forest, but said the deer can coexist if managed properly. “Before you know it, everywhere is a pristine area and it’s more and it’s more and it’s more,” he said. “And our culture is slowly getting pushed away and pushed out.” Officials have fenced off forests and killed sheep, goats and pigs inside the area to help save a multitude of species inside, such as the slow-growing mamane tree and the palila songbirds that eat its seeds. The Pele Defense Fund, a group that led a successful legal fight in the 1990s to win native Hawaiians access to private land for hunting, is now rallying hunters together for a class-action lawsuit against the state to stop its efforts to eradicate game animals and fence off land. “They go in and kill all the pigs and everything else. Then you eliminated the hunter,” said Palikapu Dedman, the fund’s president. “I think the hunter has been ignored and it’s the state’s responsibility to look out for them, too.” Jimmy Gomes, operations manager at Ulupalakua Ranch, spanning 18,000 acres on the slopes of Haleakala volcano in Maui, said deer have been jumping over rock walls and through wire fences to eat ranch grass set aside for cattle. Gomes said he’s seen a thousand at a time, and has had to wait several minutes for a herd of deer to pass before he can ride through them on horseback. “Sometimes you’re driving cattle, you’re moving cattle across, and all of the sudden you see this — like the mountains moving — this deer coming down,” he said. Gun club members and ranch employees have killed more than 1,000 deer on the ranch this year, but Gomes said it hasn’t made a dent in their numbers. Sam Ohu Gon III, senior scientist and cultural adviser at the Nature Conservancy of Hawaii, said the deer could threaten Big Island plants that are important for the environment and Hawaiian culture. Among those are the uhiuhi tree, which has a hard wood ancient Hawaiians favored for making weapons and tools, and the ohelo berry, which is used to make jam and is sacred to Pele, the goddess of volcanoes. The threat to the Big Island’s native ecosystems is particularly serious as half the island still has native vegetation — a high ratio compared with other Hawaiian islands. “It cannot be a free-for-all of hunting everywhere you want and the hell with everything else. Because what would that result in?” Gon said. “That just spirals us down into less and less of what makes Hawaii unique.”
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