Cree councillor, wildlife biologist object to Alberta wolf and coyote culls

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Cree councillor, wildlife biologist object to Alberta wolf and coyote culls

'I wouldn't shoot a coyote unless it was attacking,' says Saddle Lake elder

By Brandi Morin, CBC News Posted: Nov 29, 2017 2:29 PM ET| Last Updated: Nov 29, 2017 2:29 PM ET

councillor from Kehewin Cree Nation in northern Alberta says he objects to a coyote and wolf reduction incentive program advertised by the local county, as an attack on the "four legged nation."

There are 16 municipalities with predator bounty programs in Alberta. St. Paul county introduced its program six years ago in order to reduce the population of coyotes and wolves over the calving season.

The bounty offers a payout of $15 per coyote and $75 per wolf to a maximum number of 20 coyotes/wolves per week, and a total season maximum of 100 coyotes/wolves per resident/landowner.

Kehewin Cree Nation councillor Benjamin Badger said the "four-legged nation," which includes the wolf and coyote family clans, have shared the land with Indigenous people forever and should not be hunted and killed.

"The farming and agriculture has just devastated the land that they use to sustain themselves," said Badger.

"Metaphorically, you take what's happening to the wolves and apply it to what Indian people had to face ... there's so much correlation."

'It's not right'

He referenced the Canadian government's policy to "get rid of the the Indian problem" in the late 1800s and early 1900s, which was unsuccessful, but still produced harmful results such as intergenerational trauma stemming from Indian residential schools.

"The wolves are starting to reclaim the land that was already theirs," said Badger.

"The wolves are encroaching on municipal jurisdictions but those are fictional borders, you can't see them. The animals don't see that."

Saddle Lake Cree Nation elder and hunter Joe Cardinal said he's noticed the St. Paul area filling with more predatory animals in recent years.

He said he doesn't agree with the large culling of wolves and coyotes, but added that county wildlife officials should make sure the reduction program is carried out in the least harmful way.

"I respect all animals," said Cardinal.

"I don't take nothing [from the land] unless it has to be taken for food purposes. I wouldn't shoot a coyote unless it was attacking. It's not right."

Non-targeted species affected

Wildlife biologist Gilbert Proulx has studied predation bounty programs in the Prairies since they were reintroduced in Alberta and Saskatchewan in 2007 and 2009 after 40 years.

He said the reduction tactics are inhumane and ineffective.

"The scientific community, environmental organizations and public must vigorously condemn the use of such programs," said Proulx.

According to Proulx, killing methods used by bounty hunters include shooting animals in non-vital regions of their bodies, neck snares and strychnine poisoning, which causes suffering and delayed deaths. It also causes unnecessary deaths to many non-targeted species.

"There is no proof to demonstrate that wolves or coyotes prey on livestock," he said.

"I find it frustrating that a small interest group can dictate the future of our wildlife communities."

'A political decision'

He said he's spoken with ranchers from the area who have told him they don't have a problem with coyotes or wolves.

He called the bounty "a political decision" aimed at appeasing farmers and ranchers who have lost livestock, but said they already receive compensation from the government for their losses.

Killing off predators won't solve concerns ranchers may have regarding predators stalking their livestock, he said.

"Wolves are dominant animals," he said.

"If you kill a dominant animal and destroy the social structure, the ones that survive, suddenly they're the new bosses. They split and each make their own pack, and then there's coyotes and wolves from other regions that come in."

Proulx co-authored a study that reported that from 2010 to 2015, 25,940 coyotes and 1,425 wolves were killed in Alberta through bounty programs.

County rules

Keith Kornelsen, agricultural fieldman for St. Paul county, said the county has averaged a yearly payout of $18,000 in its bounty program. It budgets $25,000 per year for the program.

Kornelsen said the county enforces strict rules on trappers to ensure the killing methods are humane. He said the county has heard some concerns from residents about the reduction program, and is open to hearing them.

The bounty program in St. Paul runs from Nov. 1 to March 31.
 
Yeah will, don't really give a darn one way or the other what this one man with an opinion has to say.
 
Proulx sounds like an anti-hunter more than a biologist... he contradicts himself in his statements... it appears to me that he is pushing a personal agenda.
 
The bounty runs from November 1, 2017 to March 31, 2018...while the furs are "prime". I'm wondering what these Municipalities do with the coyotes and wolves when they get them. Any one who follows North American Fur Auctions knows that prime extra large and larger coyote usually sells for $100+ per pelt and extra large wolf pelts sell for several hundred and top lots with desirable colouration have sold for over $1000 per pelt recently.

I would gladly pay someone what they pay to quintuple my money. All I have to do is get a fur license and become a dealer to sell to NAFTA?

I can't believe they even run programs like this. As if they have no better way to allocate their budgets. Even though 25k a year is a relatively small amount of cash, unless they're making money running these programs I don't see any benefit to anyone other than a very small subset of their population who might have legitimate predation concerns, which could easily be addressed using professional trappers and local hunters, and outfitters who can line up non residents to pay exorbitant cash for predator hunts...no need to spend any tax dollars on the bounty. Money better spent else where.
 
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Guess I look on anyone from saddle Lake as a hypocrite. They drive 300 miles to the Ya Ha Tinda to hunt elk, in competition with the wolves.

Grizz
 
Let me guess. The Elder is a born again Liebral. Don't you know if you kill the wolf and coyotes/ THEY WIN. Sorry.
 
Both of the self-appointed experts quoted are mistaken about the natural order of things.

Wolves will kill coyotes that they catch in their hunting territories because they compete for the same food. Coyotes do it to foxes. It's natural that people will also protect their food source by killing these predators.
 
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