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271 pages, Hardcover
First published June 7, 2016
Early on the National Park Service was devising methods to eradicate wolves, mountain loins and coyotes. It was all out warfare - they shot and poisoned these animals without regard. They murdered these animals in the thousands.
”Suffice it to say here that as we humans head off into an uncertain and probably dangerous future of our own making, it might be wise to keep an eye on [coyotes]. I, for one, am going to be very interested in how coyotes cope with the twenty-first century and what insights we might draw about our own circumstances from a coyote history that so often seems to mirror ours.”Coyotes are predators, feeding mainly on small mammals, birds, or fruits and they are sociable, hunting in packs. Contrary to the notion that coyotes were responsible for cattle kills, they were nearly always scavengers of large animals as befit their position in the ranking of predators in the larger ecosystem. Very nearly killed off as pests since the end of the nineteenth century, they have none-the-less persevered.
The coyote's biography in North America has always been one of many acts, but in the twenty-first century it is now a fully American story, an adventure from coast to coast. The Hundred Years' War on Coyotes in the American West has certainly pressed on with a federal killing agency that continues to dispatch a phenomenal number of coyotes every year. Its irony as a taxpayer program is that its relentless, lethal harassment of coyotes in the rural West is a principal reason why there are coyotes running through the streets of New York City today. If we actually want fewer of them or want to slow their saturation of the continent, the obvious solution is to stop killing them and allow their populations to stabilize.