The Guardian (USA)

Trump administra­tion authorizes 'cyanide bombs' to kill wild animals

- Jimmy Tobias

The Trump administra­tion has reauthoriz­ed government officials to use controvers­ial poison devices – dubbed “cyanide bombs” by critics – to kill coyotes, foxes and other animals across the US.

The spring-loaded traps, called M-44s, are filled with sodium cyanide and are most frequently deployed by Wildlife Services, a federal agency in the US Department of Agricultur­e that kills vast numbers of wild animals each year, primarily for the benefit of private farmers and ranchers.

In 2018, Wildlife Services reported that its agents had dispatched more than 1.5 million native animals, from beavers to black bears, wolves, ducks and owls. Roughly 6,500 of them were killed by M-44s.

On Tuesday, after completing the first phase of a routine review, the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency announced that it would allow sodium cyanide’s continued use in M-44s across the country on an interim basis.

Yet the traps are facing increasing opposition, and have, in the past, led to the inadverten­t deaths of endangered species and domestic pets and caused harm to humans.

In 2017, a teenage boy named Canyon Mansfield was hiking with his dog in the woods behind his family’s home in Pocatello, Idaho when Mansfield’s dog triggered a cyanide trap that sprayed a plume of poison dust into the air. The dog died on the spot and Mansfield was rushed to the hospital, where he ultimately recovered. His parents are suing Wildlife Services over the poisoning.

Mansfield’s case made national headlines and has fueled opposition to M-44s. In May, in response to advocacy by environmen­tal groups, Oregon’s governor Kate Brown signed a ban on the use of the traps in the state. In 2017, Wildlife Services agreed to temporaril­y halt the use of M-44s in Colorado after environmen­tal groups sued. The agency also stopped using them in Idaho after the Mansfield case came to light.

In the months before the EPA announced the reauthoriz­ation, conservati­on groups and members of the public flooded the agency with comments calling for a complete national ban on the predator-killing poison. According to an analysis provided by the Center for Biological Diversity, which is a leading opponent of M-44s, 99.9% of all comments received by the EPA opposed the reauthoriz­ation of sodium cyanide for predator control purposes.

Although the agency took a different view, it did impose new restrictio­ns on the use of M-44s. Among other things, the agency will now prohibit government officials from placing M-44s within 100 feet of public roads or trails. The agency’s reauthoriz­ation decision is only an interim one and a final decision on the matter is expected to come down after 2021.

Brooks Fahy, the executive director of the environmen­tal group Predator Defense and a leading opponent of M-44s, denounced the EPA’s decision.

It is a “complete disaster”, he said. “[The EPA] ignored the facts and they ignored cases that, without a doubt, demonstrat­e that there is no way M-44s can be used safely.”

In response to the Guardian’s request for comment, the EPA referenced the documentat­ion of the decision on its website.

 ?? Photograph: Tom Koerner/US Fish and Wildlife Service ?? Coyote stands in the frost in the Seedskadee national wildlife refuge in Wyoming.
Photograph: Tom Koerner/US Fish and Wildlife Service Coyote stands in the frost in the Seedskadee national wildlife refuge in Wyoming.
 ?? Photograph: Center for Biological Diversity ?? An M-44 cyanide trap, chewed and with fur nearby.
Photograph: Center for Biological Diversity An M-44 cyanide trap, chewed and with fur nearby.

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