What bugs/diseases/critters have ya'll seen that weren't around 30-40 years ago?

   / What bugs/diseases/critters have ya'll seen that weren't around 30-40 years ago? #171  
For us in Virginia, it has been coyotes and black bear. Bear used to just be in the mountains and swamps of eastern VA but now they are in every county. We have one around my house currently where there were none years ago.

A lot of folks blame the Government for introducing/re-introducing coyotes to VA (Hear all kind of theries on this). I can hear them at night running down rabbits. All I know is they were not around back in the day.
 
   / What bugs/diseases/critters have ya'll seen that weren't around 30-40 years ago? #172  
We used to have pheasants, but most were stocked by a few nearby neighbors who would introduce them. Grains like wheat oats and grasses were also raised for feed. In the 80s that all changed. The neighbors no longer stock, grains are now corn and beans, fencerows have been removed, pastures and marsh land are now trees and brush. And there is less interest in hunting, and then the stocking that goes along with it. So we have very few to no pheasants here now. There is a local crowd of coyote hunters that would roam the roads with trucks and dogs with radio collars. I used to hear the coyote pups howling way off in distance, then when I was off a few miles away on another country road I would hear the same only in a different direction. I could triangulate their location on a map, always the same, along a 2000acre marsh, on a hillside. Haven't heard them in years either. They are around, I see their tracks often, I just rarely hear them like I used to. Fox populations come and go. They are around here again in higher numbers, along with rabbits everywhere. There's probably a correlation to all of that, who knows.
 
   / What bugs/diseases/critters have ya'll seen that weren't around 30-40 years ago? #173  
We used to have pheasants, but most were stocked by a few nearby neighbors who would introduce them. Grains like wheat oats and grasses were also raised for feed. In the 80s that all changed. The neighbors no longer stock, grains are now corn and beans, fencerows have been removed, pastures and marsh land are now trees and brush. And there is less interest in hunting, and then the stocking that goes along with it. So we have very few to no pheasants here now. There is a local crowd of coyote hunters that would roam the roads with trucks and dogs with radio collars. I used to hear the coyote pups howling way off in distance, then when I was off a few miles away on another country road I would hear the same only in a different direction. I could triangulate their location on a map, always the same, along a 2000acre marsh, on a hillside. Haven't heard them in years either. They are around, I see their tracks often, I just rarely hear them like I used to. Fox populations come and go. They are around here again in higher numbers, along with rabbits everywhere. There's probably a correlation to all of that, who knows.
Birdful has a nice article on the many reasons for the decline; What happened to the ring-necked pheasant? - Birdful TL;DR, changes in farming practices and habitat declines.

Ring neck pheasant is native to Asia, and was introduced to the US in 1881 to an island in Washington state. From the founding population of fifty, they formed a breeding population for stocking around the country.

All the best,

Peter
 
   / What bugs/diseases/critters have ya'll seen that weren't around 30-40 years ago? #174  
A lot of folks blame the Government for introducing/re-introducing coyotes to VA (Hear all kind of theries on this
I hear that up here, also. From colonial times to the middle of the last century there was an ongoing attempt to irradicate predators. It was very effective; we haven't had wolves or mountain lions in a century. Yet nature abhors a vacuum, and the coyotes have filled the niche left behind by the above.
 
   / What bugs/diseases/critters have ya'll seen that weren't around 30-40 years ago? #175  
Sorry I haven't read the whole thread, but I have witnessed some changes here in central Oklahoma. When I was growing up, there were some deer, but very few. We lived in the country, but I only saw one deer in the wild. The meat hunters during the depression had wiped them out in some areas; including turkeys and beavers. We had coyotes, and a few bob cats, but no mountain lions.

They prey animals have increased tremendously, including deer. Saw my first turkey in this state maybe 40 years ago; a couple years ago I counted 64 in my front yard. Mountain lions are being spotted here abouts, and I believe I saw one on the edge of our creek last year. We are now seeing the occasional eagle and beaver.

Don't know much about vegetation, but I remember my Dad saying that during the dust bowl, after a big blow, they often saw weird, foreign plants sprout up in the fields.
 

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