Learn More About
EWA As North America's
oldest and most successful organization of non-native wildlife
breeders and managers, the Exotic Wildlife Association (EWA) is the
leading advocate and defender of animal-owner rights and for-profit
species conservation. When game ranchers formed the
Association in 1967, they had a variety of concerns for the
industry. Many of those concerns and interests are shared by
EWA's current membership.
Today's EWA represents Members throughout the
U.S. and in several foreign countries. EWA Members have propagated
and protected some of the largest populations of privately owned
wild ungulates in the world, and have been responsible for
supporting various educational, scientific and research projects.
EWA recognizes the efforts of ranchers who have
developed herds of rare species using range management, wildlife
husbandry and hunting as management tools. In fact, such tools
have helped several species, such as the barasingha (a deer native
to India) and the scimitar-horned oryx (an antelope native to north
Africa), become more numerous on EWA Member-ranches than they are in
their entire countries of origin.
EWA's Mission is to encourage and expand the
conservation of indigenous and non-indigenous hoofstock animals, and
to help our Members develop and strengthen the markets for their
animals. To accomplish this integrated twofold mission, the EWA
strives to:
- Protect the rights of private property owners, including, but
not limited to, the right to manage and control their own land and
the indigenous and non-indigenous hoofstock animals living on it;
- Defend the owners of indigenous and non-indigenous hoofstock
animals against the misrepresentations and false allegations of
animal rights activists;
- Articulate the need for "sustainable utilization" of wildlife,
as a viable tool to maintain "proper carrying" on private
property.
- Educate policy-makers, the media and the public through
research and advocacy;
- Foster development of the alternative livestock industry
through agricultural diversification into production and
marketing;
- Promote "conservation through commerce";
- Provide technical support and useful information to our
Members, so as to benefit them, their animals, and their industry.
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