Las Vegas Review-Journal

COYOTE-KILLING CONTESTS UNDER SCRUTINY AGAIN

- By Hillary Davis A version of this story was posted on lasvegassu­n.com.

Nudged along by a Clark County Commission resolution last month against organized, competitiv­e coyote hunts, the Nevada Department of Wildlife Commission is also considerin­g a ban on such contests.

The arguments remain the same: Those who oppose regulation say coyotes are a threat to humans, pets, livestock and prey game and need control. Those who want to see the hunts outlawed say the “wildlife killing contests” have no ecological benefit and are gruesome, unethical waste.

“I doubt any of those that have provided input or those providing input today will question their biases or rethink their position as a result of the testimony offered,” Wildlife Commission­er Dave Mcninch said. “There will also be a lot of data used and misused to support various positions and probably a lot of perceived logic flaws and inaccurate statements.”

The wildlife commission during a weekend meeting didn’t commit to new regulation­s but said it would bring the topic back later this year.

Department Director Tony Wasley said Nevada hosted about two dozen competitiv­e coyote hunts in the last year, but he doesn’t know how many coyotes were taken, or, more important, from where. The hunts come with prizes in categories like most or largest animals culled.

Wasley said studies on coyote control require that the canids be substantia­ted as the predator limiting the prey — like deer — and that at least 70% of the animals in any given area had to be removed. He said with a lack of data, it’s hard to say if the culls have any real, population-level effects either way.

Further, predator-caused mortality isn’t necessaril­y additive, he said. In many instances it’s compensato­ry.

“As a biologist, I believe that there’s

often an oversimpli­fied relationsh­ip between predator control and the presumed benefit to prey species,” Wasley said. “The relationsh­ip is far more complicate­d, it’s far more complex than a simple removal of something with claws and fangs that could potentiall­y eat prey — if there’s fewer of those then there’s always going to be more prey.”

Commission­er Kerstan Hubbs distilled that by saying the hunts don’t keep the coyote population from exploding. “However, many people believe that is

true,” she said.

And others believe images of piles of dead coyotes are distastefu­l, she said.

But Brian Burris, speaking in support of the hunts, said he wanted the commission to follow science, not emotion.

“I ask this board to actually go through, find the science, follow the science, and don’t let Clark County — one small urban area — rule the state of Nevada and tell this commission what they should be doing,” he said.

Michelle Lute, a biologist from the organizati­on Project Coyote, said she also supported science-based modern wildlife management.the hunt offer no benefits whatsoever, said Lute, a former state biologist in New Mexico, where such activities are banned.

“They beget chaos across the landscape with unregulate­d killing of predators that do not need such control,” Lute said. “Predators self-regulate and have done so based on compensato­ry mechanisms, competitor­s and native prey availabili­ty for millennia.”

Patrick Donnelly, Nevada state director for the Center for Biological Diversity, said the hunts were “barbaric and anachronis­tic.” Most people find them repellent, he said.

“Not only are these contests unsporting and wasteful but they are also ecological­ly harmful and deeply at odds with the principles of the North American Wildlife Conservati­on Model, which requires that wildlife only be killed for a legitimate purpose,” he said. “We may have our own objections to that particular model, but if it is the credo that legitimate hunters wrap themselves in, it’s clear that this is not a legitimate hunting activity.”

Paul Dixon chairs a Clark County advisory board for the Wildlife Department, which voted to suggest the state commission now take action on another ban attempt. He said the number of animals taken at these events is low, and the ban would be a slippery slope that could lead to a reluctance to remove problemati­c urban coyotes.

Coyotes are not protected by federal or state laws; it is not illegal to hunt coyotes in Nevada without a license.

Mcninch emphasized that a ban would narrowly focus on organized, competitiv­e hunts. It would not prohibit individual­s from dispatchin­g coyotes to protect themselves or their property, harvesting their pelts, or from hunting coyotes outside of an organized contest. It also wouldn’t apply to fishing or chukar derbies or big buck contests.

Years of efforts

Nevada has been here before.

In 2015, the state Wildlife Commission considered a public petition to ban the contests but dismissed the petition as incomplete. A more specific petition resurfaced later that year, but the commission voted it down over concerns with the regulatory process.

In 2016, a group of commission­ers drew up a draft policy, but the full commission noted that as a policy, and not a binding regulation, it would be unenforcea­ble. The commission then turned away from crafting new regulation.

In 2019, the Nevada Senate introduced a bill that would have made coyote contests a felony. The proposed legislatio­n died in committee.

But in February, the Clark County Commission pitched its own resolution against the contests, which it finalized earlier this month. Several states that have legally banned predator hunting contests, including California, Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado, have also called them unethical and ineffectiv­e ways to maintain the balance of predator and prey animals. Clark County Commission­er Justin Jones has said the bans in nearby states have pushed the hunts to Nevada.

Though merely a nonbinding statement of opposition, the Clark County resolution urged Mcninch — who also opposes the hunts — to bring it back before his colleagues, saying he wanted to get ahead of the lingering issue.

The last World Championsh­ip Coyote Calling Contest — “calling” is a preferred term among participan­ts in the organized hunts — was staged outside Elko, in rural far northeaste­rn Nevada.

For its part, the Elko County Commission voted this month to support future contests, saying they complement existing federal programs to control predators and protect the county’s important livestock industry. In a resolution calling out the Southern Nevada opposition, Elko’s statement says “eliminatin­g ‘killing contests’ would be the camel’s nose under the tent that could eventually threaten such wholesome family events like fishing derbies; and … Nevada’s counties should be allowed to make their own decisions regarding hunting contests. Clark County should not be allowed to dictate what is legal in the rural counties.”

Elko County Commission­er and rancher Wilde Brough said at the March 17 meeting that one of his newborn calves had died a day earlier after being attacked by a coyote before it was even out of its mother. Brough also blamed coyotes for decimating the area’s deer population.

“They don’t know anything about these coyotes and what they are in Elko County and what they do,” Brough said. “They have no idea.”

Mcninch said he recognized the fears hunters had about losing rights and privileges one piece at a time.

“Whether we like it or not, even though the vast majority of sportsmen don’t even participat­e in them, the negative connotatio­ns associated with killing contests reflect negatively on hunting.

Fellow commission­er Tom Barnes, however, didn’t see the difference between competitiv­e coyote hunts and fishing derbies, and perception may not line up with reality.

“I look at them as people with like-minded ideas going out to do something that they all enjoy … It’s hard for me to get my head wrapped around this perception of it being so horrible,” Barnes said.

 ??  ??
 ?? KEVIN CLIFFORD / THE NEVADA APPEAL VIA AP FILE (2007) ?? With cows grazing in the background, a coyote searches for food on a ranch near Carson City in this 2007 file photo. The Nevada Department of Wildlife Commission is considerin­g a ban on organized, competitiv­e coyote hunts.
KEVIN CLIFFORD / THE NEVADA APPEAL VIA AP FILE (2007) With cows grazing in the background, a coyote searches for food on a ranch near Carson City in this 2007 file photo. The Nevada Department of Wildlife Commission is considerin­g a ban on organized, competitiv­e coyote hunts.
 ?? SUN FILE ?? The Nevada Department of Wildlife Commission says it will debate later this year institutin­g a ban on coyote-killing contests.
SUN FILE The Nevada Department of Wildlife Commission says it will debate later this year institutin­g a ban on coyote-killing contests.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States