Truro News

Animal action

- BY TOM AYERS THE CHRONICLE HERALD

Lone coyote spotted crossing the runways at Halifax Stanfield Internatio­nal Airport.

A lone coyote, a species sometimes known as the “ghost of the plains” because of its eerie howl and brief appearance­s in the dark of night, is haunting the runways at Halifax Stanfield internatio­nal airport.

A pilot reported spotting one on a Halifax runway in the early morning hours back in July, and three different pilots also said a coyote crossed their runways late at night or early in the morning last Friday and Saturday, according to the Civil Aviation Daily Occurrence Reporting System.

Airport wildlife officers are working on the assumption the coyote is alone, because they have spotted a similar-looking animal darting into the forested area around the airfield perimeter, said Mike Rantala, Stanfield’s director of safety, security and environmen­t.

“We don’t know for sure but we think it is the same one,” he said Wednesday.

“We’ve seen it before and it is a young, small coyote.”

The perimeter is marked by a fence that’s partially buried to keep wildlife from digging in underneath, said Rantala, and staff regularly patrol the area to check for possible entry spots.

They haven’t found any obvious path for a coyote to get inside the fence, but a small one may have been able to squeeze its way in through one of the gates, he said.

“We think it’s got in somehow but now can’t get out, just because you have all that 19 kilometres of buried fence, essentiall­y, so unless it found that same spot where it got in, it’s difficult.”

The airfield is kept clear of anything that might seem attractive to wildlife looking for food, water or shelter, and while staff sometimes have to deal with an occasional

groundhog or skunk, most of their efforts are focused on birds, said Rantala.

“This is relatively rare, and if somehow it did get in and went through a fence gate, just for that reason it’s almost stuck in there.”

In any case, wildlife pose a potential threat to airplanes taking off or landing, and they need to be removed, he said.

Staff use hand-held flares that make a loud noise to scare off birds, and they have baited a trap to try to capture and remove the coyote.

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 ?? PARKS CANADA ?? Several pilots have reported a coyote crossing the runway at Halifax Stanfield Internatio­nal Airport. An airport official says once a coyote makes its way behind the fence, getting out would be hard.
PARKS CANADA Several pilots have reported a coyote crossing the runway at Halifax Stanfield Internatio­nal Airport. An airport official says once a coyote makes its way behind the fence, getting out would be hard.

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