OCTOBER 2021 IN THIS ISSUE:
Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.
~Margaret Mead
The last few months have been a rollercoaster ride with several significant wins for wildlife, as well as some losses. It’s often two steps forward and one step back — especially when it comes to wildlife conservation in the United States.
On the positive side, we continue to make progress with our National Campaign to End Wildlife Killing Contests. The city of Reno, Nevada recently passed a resolution 6 to 1 that condemns killing contests and calls on the state to ban the practice. We are hopeful that the Nevada Board of Wildlife Commissioners will do the right thing and advance a statewide ban at its upcoming November meeting, which would be a major step toward making Nevada the ninth state to ban this abhorrent form of slaughter.
And after a multi-year battle, we prevailed in convincing the Mendocino County Board of Supervisors to end their contract with the rogue U.S. Department of Agriculture’s misnamed program Wildlife Services, saving countless numbers of animals from brutal and unnecessary deaths. Project Coyote, with the help of our long-term partners at the Mendocino Nonlethal Wildlife Alliance, will work with the county to implement a nonlethal program to assist in mitigating conflicts between wildlife, humans, and domestic animals.
As you may have read in some of our publications, we are expanding our reach into the Midwest in partnership with The Rewilding Institute (TRI), Half-Earth, and BeWild/ReWild with two new positions. Our new team members will help us promote the four essential Cs of conservation: Cores, Connectivity, Carnivores, and Coexistence to rewild landscapes across the Mississippi Watershed. Learn more about this exciting new initiative here.
On a more somber and sad note, we lost a close friend and ally this month who many have come to know in our collaborations with TRI. Kim Crumbo was an inspirational force to anyone who met him and a wildlife conservation hero to all of us in the environmental movement. You can read my tribute to Kim here. Our thoughts and condolences go out to his family and to our fellow advocates across our conservation community who are still reeling from this painful and unexpected loss.
Rest in peace, Kim. We will carry the torch of your dedication and passion for wildlife and wildlands through all our collective steps forward.
Carnivore Conservation & Coexistence ~ California
Project Coyote celebrated a momentous victory when the Mendocino Board of Supervisors voted 3 to 2 to terminate their long-standing relationship with the rogue U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) program misnamed “Wildlife Services.” Mendocino County, like most western counties, contracted with the federal program to kill native wild animals largely at the behest of ranchers and farmers. This victory comes after nearly a decade of attempts to hold Wildlife Services accountable to the public that funds their lethal activities in the county. Next steps include Dr. Lute serving on a committee to inform the new nonlethal program funded with the county’s gas tax dollars.
In a similar effort, Project Coyote and our allies at Feather River Action have been working to help usher Plumas and Sierra counties into the era of modern wildlife conservation and stewardship by terminating their Wildlife Services contract. We have attended every Board of Supervisors meeting that considered the issue. They have approved their budget with the Wildlife Services contract but may include contract language to require non-lethal methods be used first. A step in the right direction! Stay tuned for more.
On March 26 and May 28, the California Fish and Game Commission held online workshops about Coyotes in the Urban Environment. The video from the first workshop is available here, and the video for the second, which features Dr. Lute as a member of the expert panel, is available here (see coverage in The Malibu Times).
Carnivore Conservation & Coexistence ~ Nevada
On September 8, the Reno City Council voted 6 to 1 in favor of a resolution condemning wildlife killing contests and calling on the Nevada Board of Wildlife Commissioners to ban contests. This resolution and the similar Clark County resolution from earlier this year are clear indications of the growing support for a regulatory ban on wildlife killing contests across the state, which the Nevada Board of Wildlife Commissioners is considering and discussing at nearly every commission meeting this year. This victory picked up significant media coverage, including from the Associated Press.
Carnivore Conservation & Coexistence ~ Wisconsin
Project Coyote is working to halt wolf hunting in Wisconsin with several advocacy and public engagement actions. On August 31, Project Coyote — along with co-plaintiffs Animal Wellness Action, the Center for a Humane Economy, Friends of the Wisconsin Wolf, and citizen Pat Clark — sued the state of Wisconsin over its reckless and politically motivated decision to authorize a quota of 300 wolves for the November 2021 wolf hunt, on top of the 218 known killed in the February hunt. The lawsuit alleges that the political appointees on the Wisconsin Natural Resources Board (Board) — including a hold-over member from the Scott Walker Administration who refuses to cede control of his seat — disregarded the recommendations from professional staff at the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) and chose to set an arbitrary and unsustainable kill level without regard for the health and well-being of the wolf population or sustainable ecosystems in which the wolves play an integral role. The lawsuit also alleges that the 2011 law that requires Wisconsin to hold an annual wolf hunt is unconstitutional. It asks the Dane County Circuit Court to overturn the law, reverse the quota set by the Board, and enjoin DNR from issuing licenses for the November hunt. We will keep you updated as developments occur. Read more here.
Carnivore Conservation & Coexistence ~ New Mexico
Project Coyote, along with ten allied environmental groups, submitted a robust 92-page comment elaborating on the many ways USDA Wildlife Services fails to adequately consider nonlethal methods in their self-proclaimed mission to promote human-wildlife coexistence in New Mexico. The rogue killing program released a draft Environmental Assessment for its carnivore-killing activities in New Mexico this August. Dr. Lute and Science Advisor Dr. Adrian Treves made significant contributions to this effort.
Carnivore Conservation & Coexistence ~ Federal / National
The Global Indigenous Council released “FAMILY,” a short film highlighting the deep cultural connection Indigenous Nations share with wolves and the dire threats to wolves. “FAMILY” calls on Interior Secretary Deb Haaland to meet with Tribes and relist the wolf under the Endangered Species Act. This meeting occurred on September 28, where Tribes presented “The Wolf, A Treaty of Cultural and Environmental Survival” to Haaland. For centuries, Tribes successfully protected wolves as family. The world is facing a mass extinction and biodiversity crisis, and wolves need us. That’s why Project Coyote is standing with Tribes and highlighting their voices in the protection of wolves, notably with this recent opinion piece in Earth Island Journal from Dr Lute.
The documentary film, Wildlife Killing Contests, which exposes the dark underbelly of these brutal and senseless events, just received an Honorable Mention from the prestigious Jackson Wild Media Awards. The related Petition to End Wildlife Killing Contests on Federal Public Lands now has over 63,000 signatures and will buttress our nationwide legislative efforts to end these events. If you haven’t already, watch the film trailer here.
COYOTE FRIENDLY COMMUNITIES
For Project Coyote, summertime is a busy time of year as communities seek assistance in promoting peaceful coexistence between people, companion animals, and young coyotes who are starting to explore neighborhoods. The Coyote Friendly Communities program offers science-based resources to help communities safely coexist with America’s native song dog. Check out recent staff and science advisors’ activities on this front:
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- presentation from Dr. Michelle Lute for a California urban coyote workshop
- NBC interview with Camilla Fox
- Keli Hendricks’ presentation on Coexisting with Coyotes at the San Francisco Commission of Animal Control & Welfare
- Representative John Maguranis talk about coyotes in Massachusetts
- An article featuring Science Advisor Dr. Joanna Lambert
Artists for Wild Nature
Project Coyote and the Michigan Technological University’s (MTU) College of Forest Resources and Environmental Sciences also collaborated to present the multimedia art exhibition, The Spirit of the Hunt, featuring the creative talents of sculptors, photographers, poets, and painters including Project Coyote’s Artists for Wild Nature Monte Deignan and Sarah Killingsworth, renown photographer Jim Brandenburg, and local Michigan artists Joyce Koskenmaki and Ladislav Hanka. This exhibit is open to the public from August 28th through October 17th on the MTU campus in Houghton, MI. There was a reception with facilitated discussions by Project Coyote Science Advisor Dr. John Vucetich on Friday, September 3rd.
Science and Stewardship
Chris Mowry, Wilson, L. A., & VonHoldt, B. M. (2021). Interface of Human/Wildlife Interactions: An Example of a Bold Coyote (Canis latrans) in Atlanta, GA, USA. Diversity, 13(8), 372.
Please Welcome the Newest Members of the Project Coyote Team!
Project Coyote has been busy growing our team! We welcome Mandy Stark Culbertson as the new Operations and Outreach Manager. Mandy has a strong set of skills in marketing and communications and will be an essential team member in day-to-day operations and longer-term strategic planning.
Also joining us in September, Kelly Borgmann is filling our brand new position of Coexistence Coordinator for the joint Big River Connectivity initiative with The Rewilding Institute. Kelly will be joined by another new recruit (still in the hiring process) and help Project Coyote and partners expand our coexistence mission in the Midwest!
Project Coyote Webinars
Project Coyote (in collaboration with The Rewilding Institute) is continuing with our informative and engaging series of webinars. If you missed any of the presentations, you can find replays here on our website for easy viewing and sharing.
To date, speakers and topics include:
- Science Advisory Board member Dave Parsons and The Rewilding Institute’s Kim Crumbo: Mexican Gray Wolf Recovery
- Science Advisory Board member Dr. Adrian Treves: A Critical Evaluation of Legal and Illegal Killing of Native Predators
- Wildlife Educator Sarah Killingsworth: An Inside Look at the Intriguing, Elusive Bobcat
- Science Advisory Board member Dr. Joanna Lambert: Fear, Wild Things, and Coexisting with Predators
- National Carnivore Conservation Manager Dr. Michelle Lute: (What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love and Coexisting
- New Hampshire and Vermont Representative Chris Schadler: Becoming Wolf: The Eastern Coyote
- Ambassadors Daniel Dietrich and Melissa Groo and Keeping It Wild Youth Education & Outreach Program Coordinator Sarah Killingsworth: Predator Photography: An Ethical Approach
Project Coyote Team Recent Publications, Press and Presentations
Podcasts, Webinars, Conferences, TV and Radio Shows
Dave Parsons and Michelle Lute:
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- Hunting in National Wildlife Refuges? (EarthMatters Radio, July 7, 2021)
Michelle Lute
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- Co-hosted by the Humane Society of the United States and WildEarth Guardians, Trapping in Nevada (Aug. 18, 2021)
- Presented Project Coyote’s programs and campaigns at the 2021 Animal Conference (Oklahoma City, Aug. 28, 2021)
- Co-hosted by the Humane Society of the United States and WildEarth Guardians, Becoming Bear Aware in California: Learning how to keep bears wild and people safe (Sept. 13, 2021)
Fauna Tomlinson:
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- Gratitude to Reno City Council and Mayor (This is Reno, Sept. 9)
- Featured in Reno City Council Backs Ban on Wildlife Killing Contests (Associated Press, US News, Sept. 10)
Joanna Lambert:
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- Featured in And Still the Song Dog Sings (by Will Stolzenburg, Rewilding Earth Blog, June 21, 2021)
Michelle Lute:
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- Featured in Montana and Idaho Have Legalized Killing Wolves on a Massive Scale (Richard Pallardy, Gizmodo, July 5, 2021)
- Featured in Feather River Action! calls for Non-Lethal Predator Defense Program to replace USDA Wildlife Services presence as contract comes up for renewal (Laura Westmoreland, Plumas News, Aug. 9, 2021)
- Fighting Hate With Love and Lawsuits (Earth Island Journal, September 27, 2021)
George Wuerthner:
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- BTNF Plans To Expand Livestock Grazing In Upper Green River Vacant Allotments (The Wildlife News, July 10, 2021)
Adrian Treves:
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- Featured in New WI Study Suggests Even Greater Wolf Population Loss (Mike Moen, Public News Service, July 7, 2021)
Michael Nelson and John Innes:
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- What Should a Dean of Forestry Say about Old-Growth Logging? (The Tyee, July 16, 2021)
Jeremy Bruskotter, John Vucetich, Sophie L. Gilbert, Neil H. Carter, and Kelly A. George:
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- Tragic trade-offs accompany carnivore coexistence in the modern world (Conservation Letters, 2021)
Coverage of Wildlife Killing Contests film:
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- The carnage of coyote-killing contests (Carol Schaye, Sacramento News & Review, July 21, 2021)
Coverage of Wisconsin wolf lawsuit:
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- Conflict Flares Over Wisconsin Wolf Management As Wildlife Groups Attempt To Stop November Hunt (Susan Bence, Milwaukee Public Radio WUWM 89.7 FM, Sept. 1, 2021)
- Animal protection, wildlife groups file lawsuit over wolf hunt (Isiah Holmes, Wisconsin Examiner, Sept. 1, 2021)
- Wildlife groups sue to stop Wisconsin wolf hunt (Todd Richmond, Associated Press story syndicated in many outlets, Aug. 31, 2021)
- Wildlife advocates sue to stop wolf hunt; complaint alleges ‘squatting’ DNR board chair tainted decision (Chris Hubbuck, Wisconsin State Journal, Sept. 1, 2021)
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