http://ww w.leaderpost.com/technology/coyote+bounties+claimed/2559640/story.htmlAbout 15,000 coyotes have been killed since the provincial government put a bounty on the animals, but it's too early to gauge the program's level of success, Agriculture Minister Bob Bjornerud says.
The pilot project, which was announced in November and lasts until the end of March, pays hunters $20 per coyote killed. Four paws must be presented as evidence.
About 25,000 coyotes are hunted in an average year although with the low price of pelts that number was only about 16,000 last year, Bjornerud said.
"I think our $20 may help bring that number back up and I'm hoping that's what happens. But until the end of March and the applications are pretty well finalized we're not going to have a good handle on exactly where we're at," he said.
Bjornerud said in addition to assessing the numbers of coyotes killed, he'll ask for feedback from rural municipalities. Several farmers and ranchers had been complaining about trouble with coyotes killing livestock, and about increasingly bold coyotes wandering into farmyards and potentially posing a risk to small children, Bjornerud said.
He said he hopes increased hunting under the coyote control program will "put a little bit of fear back in the coyotes."
A total of 860 applications for payment have been received to date, and the average number of coyotes has been 18. The largest number from one applicant so far is 90.
The program hasn't been without controversy. Following its launch in the fall, nature and wildlife conservation groups questioned the effectiveness of a bounty.
A group has also formed on the social networking site Facebook titled "stop Brad Wall from killing coyotes." Among the 76 members registered as of Friday are several NDP caucus staffers.
Bjornerud said he expected some "push back" on the bounty but he doesn't regret the province's decision.
"I guess my counter to (the criticism) is 'So what should we do?' We should sit back until some little kid out of some family in rural Saskatchewan gets attacked by six or seven coyotes, and the first thing everybody would say is why didn't you do something," Bjornerud said.
NDP Leader Dwain Lingenfelter said he would have preferred if the province had left coyote control incentive programs entirely up to individual rural municipalities, rather than using provincial funds.
"The sense that I get in talking to a lot of rural farmers and ranchers is that there's very mixed feelings about whether this is an appropriate reaction to the issue of coyotes," Lingenfelter said.
More than 80 per cent of the province's rural municipalities have opted to participate.
David Marit, president of the Saskatchewan Association of Rural Municipalities, said he thinks the government has taken the right approach with a pilot project that will be evaluated in the spring.
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So who's gonna beat the record of 90 eh?



















































