Snowmobile bloodsport shames Wyoming, reflects Their history 

In ban trapping, Oppose Welfare Ranching, Protect The Wolves by Twowolves1 Comment

Wyoming knows nothing of Ethics clearly

The Wyoming Legislature recently voted down a bill intended to criminalize the practice of “coyote whackin’,” the disgusting practice of running over coyotes with snowmobiles or running them to exhaustion and then either shooting them or beating them to death against snowmobiles.

Participants in this bloodsport brag about their exploits in graphic online videos, raising red flags regarding animal cruelty and hunting ethics. In voting to do nothing to stop it, the Wyoming Legislature has affirmed that this practice, which should according to logic be prosecuted as animal cruelty, will instead remain perfectly legal in the state.

This vote says a lot about Wyoming’s dysfunctional relationship with native wildlife, a state that has always pushed the envelope on how far it can go in allowing political manipulations to trump sound science in its wildlife policies, and where the term “wildlife management” has become a cynical joke. One need only to look at Wyoming’s efforts to thwart predator recovery to understand how anti-science its stance has stayed.

The state just lost its battle to block the grizzly bear from being re-listed under the Endangered Species Act. The Wyoming grizzly management plan centers around a Demographic Monitoring Area, in which grizzly bears will be tolerated, theoretically delineated on the basis of habitats suitable for grizzly bears.

But toxic politics rather than sound science dictated the drawing of these boundaries. Grazing allotments for domestic sheep became magically “unsuitable” for grizzly bears, and were gerrymandered out of the DMA. Entire mountain ranges where grizzly bears already live successfully, like the Wyoming Range, were excluded at the behest of the livestock industry. Even though conservationists have already bought out many of these sheep allotments, in significant part to eliminate livestock-grizzly conflicts, these biologically suitable grizzly habitats remain exclusion zones for the great bear. To add insult to injury, the Legislature has proposed a bill to finalize grizzly hunts, even while the species is protected under the federal Endangered Species Act.

If Wyoming’s relationship with grizzly bears is fraught with political tampering, then its relationship with wolves is one dictated by unadulterated hate.

Wyoming’s wolf management plan was initially rejected by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for classifying wolves as “predatory animals” across 85 percent of the state. The categorization means that anyone can kill as many wolves as they want, in any season, with no limits on the number of wolves killed. In Wyoming, in addition to wolves the “predatory animal” category includes jackrabbits, red foxes, porcupines, raccoons, coyotes, stray domestic cats, and skunks.

This is the opposite of wildlife management. There is no pretense to limiting the number of wolves or other “predatory animals” that can be killed, or indeed any limits that would prevent these native animals from being driven to extinction across large parts of the state. Perhaps extinction is the unstated intention.

Even in the small portion of Wyoming where wolves are considered a “trophy game” animal with hunting seasons and tag limits, the state’s mismanagement of wolf hunting has led to disturbing incidents that call into question whether Wyoming should have the authority to manage wolf populations at all, much less near tourist hotspots.

In 2012, a wolf known as 06, the alpha female of the Lamar Canyon Pack and arguably the world’s most famous wolf at the time, wandered out of Yellowstone National Park and was shot to death in Wyoming by a trophy hunter. Six years later, history repeated itself in Montana when a female wolf known as Spitfire, the daughter of the 06 female, was shot outside Yellowstone. Then, during the most recent government shutdown, a female wolf was shot 2.5 miles inside Grand Teton National Park by hunters claiming to be confused about where that Park boundary was. Incidents like these have prompted tribal members and conservationists to call for a Sacred Resource Protection Zone or other buffers around Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks to prevent the hunting of wolves that inhabit the parks.

For Wyoming’s coyotes, the story is even more grim. At the behest of the livestock industry, the shadowy USDA agency Wildlife Services killed a total of 5,463 coyotes in Wyoming alone in 2017, according to agency data. Killing methods included aerial gunning, traps, snares, shooting, and even the notorious M-44 ‘cyanide bomb.’ (Full disclosure: Western Watersheds, for whom I work, has just launched a lawsuitchallenging Wildlife Services’ Wyoming wildlife-killing program.) And this body count doesn’t include the innumerable coyotes killed by hunters, trappers, and ranchers … or snowmobilers.

The roots of the hostility towards native wildlife lies with the undue influence of the livestock industry in Wyoming, and its desire to domesticate the land and eliminate any species that might interfere with their profit motives, on private lands and public lands alike. Many Wyoming ranchers are waging a war on native wildlife, poisoning prairie dogs, killing native carnivores, seeking to displace elk that “depredate” their hay supplies and compete with their cattle for grass. Thanks to the disproportionate influence of ranchers in the Wyoming Legislature, the ag industry’s hatred of coyotes enables the barbaric practice of “coyote whackin’” with snowmobiles to continue unabated.

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So, if Wyoming can’t bring itself to legislate basic animal welfare, there may be a way for the federal government to step in. Because the lands on which a handful of Wyoming snowmobilers engage in running down defenseless animals are largely federal public lands, managed by the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management on behalf of all Americans, it is possible for these agencies to pass regulations criminalizing “coyote whackin’.”

If the federal agencies won’t act to end this despicable and inhumane activity, Congress should. Allowing this to continue would be a shame that extends far beyond Wyoming — our whole nation should be embarrassed that any Americans engage in such gruesome “fun.”

Source: Snowmobile bloodsport shames Wyoming, reflects our history | WyoFile

Comments

  1. “Sport hunting’ is a sickness, a perversion and a danger and should be recognized as such. People who get their amusement from hunting and killing defenseless animals can only be suffering from a mental disorder. In a world with boundless opportunities for amusement, it’s detestable that anyone would choose to get thrills from killing others who ask for nothing from life but the chance to remain alive.” – Sir Roger Moore (seven times James Bond).
    The only humane way to shoot wildlife is with a camera. A humane “trophy hunter” only collects a picture. The worth of a person can be judged by how one treats animals. An evil person is cruel to, abuses, or kills animals. A good person cares for and respects animals. “The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated.”
    Additionally, use of lead ammunition is decimating scavenger species like eagles and California Condors. The lead enters the food chain and water eventually affecting people. Lead ammunition should be banned.
    Cruel, inhumane traps and snares should also be illegal. Both wild animals and pets have suffered painful deaths in these traps which are made even worse by baiting them.
    We need to boycott Wyoming and other states which exhibit cruel inhumanity.

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