Coyote tracks, Coyote tracks and more coyote tracks
#23
Fork Horn
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 460
RE: Coyote tracks, Coyote tracks and more coyote tracks
How many should we keep here?
After attacks, Framingham has license to kill coyotes
By Norman Miller/ MetroWest Daily News
Tuesday, January 30, 2007 - Updated: 07:34 AM EST
In a coyote counterattack, Framingham animal control officers are killing the wild animals to keep them from attacking pets.
Assistant Animal Control Officer Joe Shepherd tracked a pack of coyotes into a wooded area near the Sudbury River on Sunday and shot all four of them, Framingham Police spokesman Lt. Paul Shastany said.
“It’s in the best interest of the public and it supersedes the rights of the coyotes to circulate in the neighborhood where there are pets and small children,” said Shastany.
Shooting coyotes is not allowed unless they are considered a public safety concern, according to Colleen Olfenbuttel, a wildlife biologist for the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife.
In Framingham’s case, it looks as if the shooting was justified.
On Saturday, a coyote attacked and killed a 13-year-old cocker-shih tzu in the back yard of a Perry Henderson Road home. The dog was owned by Eileen and Robert White.
Eileen White said the coyote’s deaths will make the neighborhood safer.
“Oh great. I am happy. I’m so glad,” she said.
It is not unusual for a coyote to attack and kill small household animals, said Scott Giacoppo, deputy director of advocacy of the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention Cruelty to Animals.
After attacks, Framingham has license to kill coyotes
By Norman Miller/ MetroWest Daily News
Tuesday, January 30, 2007 - Updated: 07:34 AM EST
In a coyote counterattack, Framingham animal control officers are killing the wild animals to keep them from attacking pets.
Assistant Animal Control Officer Joe Shepherd tracked a pack of coyotes into a wooded area near the Sudbury River on Sunday and shot all four of them, Framingham Police spokesman Lt. Paul Shastany said.
“It’s in the best interest of the public and it supersedes the rights of the coyotes to circulate in the neighborhood where there are pets and small children,” said Shastany.
Shooting coyotes is not allowed unless they are considered a public safety concern, according to Colleen Olfenbuttel, a wildlife biologist for the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife.
In Framingham’s case, it looks as if the shooting was justified.
On Saturday, a coyote attacked and killed a 13-year-old cocker-shih tzu in the back yard of a Perry Henderson Road home. The dog was owned by Eileen and Robert White.
Eileen White said the coyote’s deaths will make the neighborhood safer.
“Oh great. I am happy. I’m so glad,” she said.
It is not unusual for a coyote to attack and kill small household animals, said Scott Giacoppo, deputy director of advocacy of the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention Cruelty to Animals.
#24
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Massachusetts - Northern Berkshires
Posts: 8
RE: Coyote tracks, Coyote tracks and more coyote tracks
It's not the number of coyotes that is causing problems in urban/suburban areas (like Framingham or Mattapan) it is their behavior. People in these neighborhoods allow coyotes to develop this behavior. The animals will test people out, after watching them from a distance, they start to come closer to homes and stay out in daylight hours.People in the neighborhood reinforce this behavior, either through fear or nonchalance, by running the otherway, ignoring the canines presence or actually rewarding them and trying to get them closer (disturb dens to get a picture of the pups, or directly reward them with food by hand feeding). Once they learn that "these furless, pink things on 2 legs" aren't a threat they can become bold and sometimes as domesticated as a dog. I've heard about areas where they sleep on peoples porches! Coyotes are just like dogs, they have a dominant/submissive territorial social structure and we as humans have to assert the dominance from the beginning. In tight neighborhoods where houses are packed like sardines you can't discharge a firearm and can't use the most efficient traps for canines in MA, they learn very quickly not to fear people. This doesn't mean they start to see us as prey, because they don't. They start to believe our yards are their territories and become more visible.
Those coyotes in Framingham were severly infected with mange (which happens high density wildlife populationis) with no fur on their tails and municipal ACO's have authority to euthanize sick wildlife.
Those coyotes in Framingham were severly infected with mange (which happens high density wildlife populationis) with no fur on their tails and municipal ACO's have authority to euthanize sick wildlife.
#27
RE: Coyote tracks, Coyote tracks and more coyote tracks
It's not the number of coyotes that is causing problems in urban/suburban areas (like Framingham or Mattapan) it is their behavior. People in these neighborhoods allow coyotes to develop this behavior.
Just have a little respect
I meant to add this. This is a photo of a moose antler that a coyote chewed last winter. Normally coyotes do not chew on theses, and when they do hardly ever to this extent. I am under the impression this one was starving as they had thined out the deer herd there and rabbits are no where to be found. I had also found one in another area chewed completely in half.