Reward offered in death of coyote in illegal trap

By Associated Press
Published: December 31, 2014, 10:03 AM

SEATTLE — Animal welfare organizations are offering a $2,500 reward for information after an illegal, leg-hold trap led to the death of a female coyote in the north Seattle suburb of Lake Forest Park.

The Seattle Times reports that the Humane Society of the United States and The Humane Society Wildlife Land Trust announced the reward Tuesday. They say a teenage girl out walking her dog found the dead coyote on Dec. 21. The groups say the animal apparently dragged herself to a creek after she managed to pull the trap on her foot loose from an anchoring stake.

Humane Society spokeswoman Lisa Wathne says officials think the trap was likely set on private property, but the animal was found on property owned by the Lake Forest Park Water District.

The Humane Society statement says leg-hold traps and other body-gripping animal traps were largely outlawed in Washington following passage of a citizen initiative in 2000 and the City of Lake Forest Park passed an ordinance banning the use of body-gripping animal traps in 2012.

FIRST AMEDED COMPLAINT AND FOR DECLARATORY AND INJUNCTIVE RELIEF WITH PETITION FOR ISSUANCE OF WRIT OF MANDAMUS AND/OR PROHIBITION

COMES NOW Plaintiffs/Petitioners above named, as and for their complaint against Defendants/Respondents, allege as follows:
1. NRS 501.100 provides:
Wildlife in this State not domesticated and in its natural habitat is part of the natural resources belonging to the people of the State of Nevada.
The preservation, protection, management and restoration of wildlife within the State contribute immeasurably to the aesthetic, recreational and economic aspects of these natural resources.

Continue reading the Amended Complaint Writ of Mandamus 122014

The North American Model of Wildlife Conservation in Wyoming: Understanding It, Preserving It, and Funding Its Future

Excerpt

In 2013, both the Wyoming Legislature and the public lambasted the
Wyoming Game and Fish Department (Department) for requesting license fee
increases to help fund the agency. They argued that hunters and anglers already
shouldered the bulk of the fiscal responsibility for managing wildlife, and a new fee
increase could discourage some from purchasing licenses. Ultimately, the funding
measure failed, but the debate brought to the forefront the risks and challenges of
relying exclusively on the funding model known as the North American Model of
Wildlife Conservation—an ideology developed over the past several generations
to manage and protect the future of all Wyoming’s wildlife…..Wyoming Law Review NAMWC Who Pays for Wildlife 2014

Authors:  David Willms and Anne Alexander

Nevada’s fairy-tale wildlife management

Question: When does a state wildlife commission turn into a death commission? Answer: When it does what Nevada did last December. That’s when the Nevada Wildlife Commission approved a $212,000 raid on the state’s Heritage Fund, a reserve dedicated to wildlife conservation projects.

But instead of conservation, the Nevada Wildlife Commission redirected the Heritage Fund money to two fringe hunting groups, Hunter’s Alert and the Nevada Alliance 4 Wildlife. They, in turn, planned to funnel it to the federal Wildlife Services, the agency that specializes in killing some 1.5 million predators every year. Meanwhile, the state’s wildlife agency was told to stand down in its oversight duty concerning the expenditure to kill carnivores such as coyotes, ravens, mountain lions and badgers.

The situation is beyond controversial; it is nothing short of outrageous, though recently, federal wildlife officials say they won’t proceed with plans to kill lions and other carnivores unless there is full support in Nevada for the effort, reports the Reno Gazette-Journal.

Full support is not likely to happen soon. Cecil Fredi, the president of Hunter’s Alert, called the divisive situation over the decline of mule deer “a war.”

The hunter groups argue that if you kill the animals that kill mule deer and sage grouse, the population of prey animals will rebound. Studies, however, show that this doesn’t work, and in this case, Nevadans will be burdened with illegitimate expenditures to do something that’s bound to fail, while the real hardship will be to Nevada’s ecological systems.

The $212,000 allocation the state wildlife commission made from the Heritage Fund supplements an already sizable annual expenditure to kill lions and other predators. Nevada hunters are taxed $3 for each big game license they purchase to fund continued killing. The resultant annual budget is between $350,000 and $450,000. Additionally, the Nevada Department of Wildlife dedicates another $17,000-to-$25,000 to the cause, so that all together, the state’s wildlife department spends approximately $500,000 to kill native carnivores each year.

Tina Nappe, a former member of Nevada’s Wildlife Commission, blasted the commission in January, calling it “bloodthirsty for killing predators.” And a current commissioner, Mike McBeath, told the Reno Gazette-Journal that he was concerned that some of his fellow commissioners were trying to oust the state wildlife director because he opposed spending more money to kill predators.

The belief that killing carnivores will benefit deer was dismissed as early as 1941, by the hunter and conservationist Aldo Leopold in his essay, “Thinking Like a Mountain.” Wolves were seen then as evil and rapacious, and thus were exterminated throughout the continental United States. The consequences of doing this were dire. Leopold noticed that with the demise of the wolf came an over-abundance of deer and harm to the mountain. Deer were free to strip the mountain of vegetation. The mountain, now barren, could not support deer and other species. Then the deer died in droves.

In the decades since, a profusion of scientific studies has shown that native carnivores are essential to maintaining biological diversity and the healthy functioning of ecosystems. A recent study found that mountain lions in Utah’s Zion National Park modulate deer populations and prevent overgrazing in fragile riparian systems. The balance has led to more cottonwoods, rushes, cattails, wildflowers, amphibians, lizards and butterflies and deeper, colder stream channels for native fish.

Native carnivores can benefit sage grouse, too. Despite their persecution, coyotes play a keystone role in sagebrush grasslands by preying upon medium-sized carnivores like skunks, foxes and raccoons, as well as competitors with sage grouse, such as jackrabbits.

In Nevada, fairy-tale beliefs are driving wildlife management rather than the best available science, state taxpayers are expected to pay for it, and what’s worse, targeting carnivores just doesn’t work: Hunters will not see more mule deer if native carnivores are killed. Mule deer suffer most from loss of habitat, state experts say, as well as years of drought, over-hunting and a host of other problems. As for sage grouse, research shows that the animals are also harmed by loss of habitat as well as livestock grazing, off-road vehicle use, sprawl and other land uses — but hardly from predation.

Nevada wildlife officials need to wake up and remember their Aldo Leopold and embrace science. What sage grouse and mule deer need are lots of good quality habitat with connectivity between subpopulations — not predator control. It’s time to stop this war on wildlife.

Wendy Keefover-Ring is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service of High Country News (hcn.org).

See the full story here.

The North American Model of Wildlife Conservation in Wyoming: Understanding It, Preserving It, and Funding Its Future

Excerpt

In 2013, both the Wyoming Legislature and the public lambasted the
Wyoming Game and Fish Department (Department) for requesting license fee
increases to help fund the agency. They argued that hunters and anglers already
shouldered the bulk of the fiscal responsibility for managing wildlife, and a new fee
increase could discourage some from purchasing licenses. Ultimately, the funding
measure failed, but the debate brought to the forefront the risks and challenges of
relying exclusively on the funding model known as the North American Model of
Wildlife Conservation—an ideology developed over the past several generations
to manage and protect the future of all Wyoming’s wildlife…..Wyoming Law Review NAMWC Who Pays for Wildlife 2014

Authors:  David Willms and Anne Alexander

ARE WILD HORSES AND BURROS REALLY DAMAGING WILDLIFE IN NEVADA?

 May 11, 2014 

Laura Bies, Director of Government Affairs

The Wildlife Society

5410 Grosvenor Lane, Suite 200

Bethesda, Maryland  20814-2144 

Regarding:  TWS publication:  FERAL HORSES:  GET THE FACTS 

Dear Ms Bies 

Recently, a friend sent me your above-referenced 4-page article which I’d not seen before.  Though there is no date or authorship designated, it appears that the piece was probably issued within the past 3-4 years. 

Though the Wildlife Society touts its members professional credentials early on as the authority on this matter, claiming as an organization to purse the “highest standards” and be “committed to science-based policy”, it struck me as odd that TWS used the term, “Feral” in the title instead of “Wild Horse” which is, of course,  the legal designation for many of the horses living full-time on public lands in the West. continue reading

2012 Lion Trap Injuries and Abnormalities

Remarks

Abnormalities

UNR Study Lion – Had been trapped subsequently, lost two front toes and then starved to death. TWO TOES MISSING ON RIGHT FRONT FOOT – LIKELY TRAP ACCIDENT
FEMALE HUNTED SUCCESSFULLY FOR SOME TIME WITH BROKEN RIGHT FRONT LEG. BROKEN RIGHT FRONT LEG HAD HEALED BUT RESULTED IN TWISTED/”CLUBISH” FOOT
CAUGHT IN COYOTE LEGHOLD TRAP – TOO FAR GONE TO RELEASE NONE
Incidental capture in bobcat snare NONE
COLLARED Female Lion UNR         Jesus Christ!! BAD FOOT
THREE-LEGGED CAT (LEFT FRONT MISSING BELOW KNEE) MISSING LEG
CAUGHT IN TRAP BY ACCIDENT – DEAD WHEN TRAPPED ARRIVED TRAP MARK ON LEFT FRONT FOOT, SCRAPES ON BOTH FRONT LEGS, RT CANINE BROKEN
CAUGHT IN TRAP BY ACCIDENT –  BIOLOGIST TRANQUILIZED LION. LION HAD TO BE EUTHANIZED DUE TO SEVERE INJURIES TO FRONT LEFT FOOT. FRESH TRAP INJURY
LEFT FRONT FOOT MISSING TOES – RECENT INJURY, TEETH HEAVILY WORN
NO SCARS, FOOT PREVIOUSLY IN TRAP
RM BIGHORN PROTECTION TOP RIGHT AND BOTTOM RIGHT CANINES BROKEN
“GOOD FAT ALONG THE HIDE”       ^5? OTHER – MISSING TWO TOES LEFT REAR; FORK IN RIGHT EAR
SCRATCHES ON BACK, MISSING 2 FRONT TOES ON RIGHT FOOT
TRAIL CAMERAS IN JUMPUP AND JUMBO, MANY PHOTOS MISSING TOES ON RIGHT FOOT
2 TOES MISSING ON RIGHT FRONT FOOT
SHOT AND KILLED WHILE DEER HUNTING MISSING 3 TOES ON RIGHT FRONT FOOT – OLD TRAPPING SCARS
FRONT RIGHT FOOT IN TRAP RECENTLY
MISSING LOWER RIGHT INCISOR, MISSING PREMOLAR ON LEFT SIDE
MISSING 3 TOES ON FRONT RIGHT FOOT – WAS IN TRAP ONLY WEEKS AGO
ONE CAININE TOOTH MISSING
BROKEN CLAW RIGHT FRONT
LEFT FRONT LEG, FOOT AND PAW INJURED, TOES MISSING AND LEG DEFORMED
MISSING TWO PADS ON FRONT RIGHT PAW
FULLY MUSCLED; RIBS NOT PROTRUDING; HIPS WELL MUSCLUED Missing toe -LEFT FRONT
TRAP ON REAR FOOT. DAMAGED FRONT JOINT OF RIGHT PAW
LION HAD FLEAS MISSING 2 TOES ON RIGHT FRONT FOOT – OLD INJURY
MISSING ABOUT 1″ OFF EACH EAR, MISSING 2 TOES OFF RIGHT FRONT FOOT (PERHAPS CAUGHT IN TRAP AND FROST BITTEN BEFORE GETTING AWAY?)
SMALL CUTS IN BOTH EARS, SMALL SCAR ON NOSE, RIGHT REAR PAW HAS ABNORMALITIES IN 2 TOES.
BROKEN CANINE
RIGHT FRONT FOOT INJURED – APPARENTLY OLD TRAP INJURY – TEETH CHIPPED
LION CAME IN WHILE CALLING COYOTES 2 TOES MISSING FROM LEFT REAR FOOT – FRESH, BUT WELL CLEANED AND BONE TIPS EXPOSED.
BLOODY LEFT FRONT (LEG?)
CAUGHT IN TRAP BY ACCIDENT – DEAD WHEN TRAPPED ARRIVED TRAP MARK ON LEFT FRONT FOOT, SCRAPES ON BOTH FRONT LEGS, RT CANINE BROKEN
REAR LEFT PAW MISSING TWO TOES
HALF TAIL, TRAP INJRUY – MISSING 2 TOES, FROSTBITTEN SHORT EARS
BROKEN TOP CANINE, FRONT RIGHT TORN PAD
DOGS NOT USED – LION WAS LAYING WITHIN 75 YARDS OF SHEEP BAND / NUMEROUS FLEES AROUND HEAD AND NECK BROKEN CANINE
MISSING 2 TOES ON LEFT FRONT PAW AND MOST OF HIS TEETH
MISSING TOE FRONT LEFT PAW
HUNTED LION WHILE DEER HUNTING AND SCOUTING RIGHT FRONT TOE INJURY, CANINES BROKEN, LIKELY TRAP INJURY
UPPER RIGHT CANINE BROKEN

2013 Lion Trap Injuries and Abnormalities

ID

Remarks

Abnormalities

11 White Ear Tag #41- Animal 1st seen as yearling on 9 November 2011 in Fox Range, 44 miles south (4473624n, 2274260e).  It  was accidentally trapped in bobcat set, tagged and released by Mike McCusker (1400).  Weighed 60 lbs & was w/ 1 ad f and 2 yearlings 2 middle toes missing on left front paw – old trap injury – small split in right ear.  Very fat despite injuries.
12 Caught by accident in coyote snare with sibling.
13 Caught by accident in coyote snare with sibling.
31 White Ear Tag #43- Animal 1st seen as 2 yr old on 7 Dec 2011 in Grass Valley (Unit 013) (44555400n, 288000e).  It  was accidentally trapped in bobcat set, tagged and released by Mike McCusker (1400)(Wgt 90 lbs & in good body condition). Killed 10 km SW. Just ear tag
1 Front right trap mark- McKusker released two lions from traps in the general vicinity 10 days prior.
7 Scar on left front paw
9 Animal killed chickens in back yard and was shot in a cage. Right top C1 cainine was broken and left back leg was broken (possibly from gun shot wound).
38 2 broken canines

The Use of Cruel Traps Is Unnecessary

Never, ever assume that it is necessary to cull or reduce a wildlife population simply because a group of people or a government agency tells you so.   Most of these groups either have a vested interest in the outcome they are promoting, are ill informed or understaffed, or all of the above.

Wildlife managed itself for literally billions of years before there were state and federal government agencies — not to mention hunting, trapping, and fishing industries — finding a “need” to use trapping as a “wildlife management tool.”

People have varying degrees of tolerance to wildlife in their midst, and often their concerns can be shown to be exaggerated, or or simply a matter of acclimation. Problems caused by wild animals can be better resolved by changing the conditions that allow them to happen than by killing or removing the animals (and “relocation” is not the kind alternative that many think.  For example, two thirds of relocated bears die in the first year at their new home).

If there is a genuine need to move animals, live-trap devices, such as culvert traps or box-traps, can, if properly used and maintained, be used at little risk to either target or non-target species.  But even those post risks to the animals being targeted, as well as for non target animals and humans.  They are also more expensive than education for humans and aversion training for animals.  (For more info click here )