A 'TOURIST EVENT' IN BAKER, MONTANA

Controversial Contest Brings Coyotes Again Under The Gun


By Todd Wilkinson, 1-11-07

 
 

Coyotes. What good are they?

"I don't know why God put them on this Earth. If He put them on this world to give us sport for hunting, maybe. But I'll tell you what, they do a lot of damage to livestock."

Thus says Jerrid Geving, a hunter and organizer of an annual coyote-calling and shooting contest in the hardscrabble town of Baker, located in far eastern Montana. The event is sheduled to commence again this weekend but will be accompanied by the kind of outcry one mght expect. Originally started five years ago to attract tourist dollars to the community, it offers $6,000 in prize money, according to a story written by Associated Press reporter Matthew Brown.

By clicking on the link, above, you can also weigh in by taking part in an informal poll of whether you think the competition is a sound or bad idea.

For myriad reasons, the contest is controversial, not the least of which is the contention made by its organizers that they're doing it on behalf of ranchers to help protect livestock. As a journalist who has written extensively about predator control, including authoring a book about the human quest to wipe out coyotes in the West, I can say such declarations are minimally accurate and generally misleading.

Scientific research shows that non-strategic targeting of coyotes as the Baker event does, yields no long term dividends for ranchers in terms of quelling losses, and can actually exacerbate problems. Coyotes have incredible reproductive potential and predator control that breaks up pack structure can yield a higher concentration of animals.

Even experts with Wildlife Services, the federal agency affiliated with APHIS under the umbrella of the U.S. Department of Agriculture which kills 80,000 coyotes a year, corroborates this reality.

"You kill some coyotes and six months later it's as if you didn't kill any at all. What are they accomplishing other than just being barbaric?" Brooks Fahy, executive director of the conservation advocacy group Predator Defense, told AP.

Moreover, Jim Posewitz, a three decade veteran of the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks and who today leads Orion Institutein Helena, bristles at the notion of the contest masquerading as an event custom made for serious ethical hunters. "I don't think hunting is a contest between human beings," Posewitz told AP. "We like to think it's a more meaningful relationship that we have with wildlife than simply viewing them as a competition between people."

Coyotes can cause significant losses to ranchers. Upwards of $50 million in losses a year nationwide, according to some estimates which are often disputed. But far more effective in safeguarding calves and sheep than indiscriminate killing are using guard dogs, llamas, and other non-lethal deterents such as electric fencing; hiring good vigilant shepherds; and, if control (i.e. killing) is necessary, then being strategic about it, realizing that conflict is not going away. Many environmentalists, in fact, say that government-subsidized predator control should not extend to public land livestock grazing where those lands exist to provide habitat for publicly-owned wildlife.

While the show will still go on in Baker, there is a larger looming issue here that foreshadows potential controversy involving wolves. At present, Wyoming is proposing that any wolf which wanders beyond the greater Yellowstone ecosystem (which means the vast majority of the state) be treated with the same regard as coyotes around Baker. Tagged with the label of vermin under Wyoming's plan to manage wolves after removing them from the list of federally protected species, lobos, like coyotes, could be shot, trapped, and poisoned any hour of the day, any day of the year, without just cause and in unlimited number whether they are near livestock or not. This approach is one reason why the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is reluctant to return wolf management to Wyoming.

For more information on predator control, here are the links to USDA's Wildlife Services and to several conservation groups that specialize in examining the issue in the West.

Predator Defense

Sinapu

Predator Conservation Alliance



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