Project Coyote believes that education is key to shifting the way we view and treat coyotes and other wild animals, who are intrinsically valuable in their own right and vital to creating and sustaining healthy
Project Coyote believes that education is key to shifting the way we view and treat coyotes, wolves, mountain lions and other wild carnivores, who are intrinsically valuable and vital to creating and sustaining healthy ecosystems.
Point Reyes sits at the western edge of Marin County, California, a pick-axe shaped peninsula that juts between the pounding waves of the Pacific. It’s a landscape of stark beauty; a patchwork of windswept headlands,
When the sun obliges, the view from the south end of Sunset Reservoir on 26th Avenue and Quintara offers a particularly American sparkle. The blue Pacific gleams to the west, the Golden Gate Bridge glows
Over 50,000 years ago, in the vast expanse of glaciated Eurasia, modern humans were just one of many species scraping out a living and competing for prey. At that time, we would have been contending
Wildlife Killing Contests is—as intended—extremely difficult to watch. The recently released twenty-five-minute documentary, produced by Filipe DeAndrade and Brian Moghari in partnership with Project Coyote, contains graphic footage of animals being callously slain for entertainment
The Nevada Board of Wildlife Commissioners did the right thing recently in directing staff to draft a regulation that would ban wildlife-killing contests in the state.
Living in a town so intertwined with nature allows residents to hike desolate trails, ski wide open slopes and swim in crystal clear waters. With the privilege to reside in the wilderness comes the responsibility
Washington, DC —The Animal Welfare Institute and Project Coyote commend the Maryland legislature for passing a bill today banning wildlife killing contests that target foxes, coyotes, and raccoons. Once the bill is signed by Gov.
Madison, WI — Starting this week, drivers across Wisconsin will see large and colorful billboards daylighting wildlife killing contests that occur in the state.
As a scientist advocating for evidence-based decision-making, I’m doing everything I can to promote Roxy’s Law, Senate Bill 32, to ban public lands trapping, snaring and poisoning in New Mexico.