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Seeing them and killing them are two entirely different things. Very challenging once you make up your mind to kill them. First one may seem easy but each subsequent dog will be more difficult.When I finally caught up with the two causing the most grief for my neighbor and her lambs this past spring, first was at 389 yards other was 517. I rarely get shots under 350, so yes challenging and fun. Ive removed 6 of her problem yotes in the last year, ,many sightings, few shot opportunities.
What do you do with them when you kill a mouse or rat?
Well as unpleasent as it sounds, I hang the whole coyote on the fence. Granted, I'm the only one that will see it. But I'm a firm believer in that when coyotes see dead freinds, displayed they steer clear. We have never lost a cat, chicken, calf or any other animal to coyotes. Matter of fact, we very rarely see an adult dog, only young of the year. And I clean them up when they show.
The good news it is great fun trying. The bad news is the more you kill the more pups they have. Certainly worth keeping some fear in them. Pelts are like hay prices, up and down and quality is everything. Good luck!!
The bad news is the more you kill the more pups they have.
Quote from: nwwanderer on October 04, 2020, 07:48:19 PMThe bad news is the more you kill the more pups they have. That is what environmentalists tell us but it doesn't make any sense. Perhaps it is true that if you shoot the alpha female then the beta will have more pups. Well there isn't always another female and if you shoot both females then there won't be more pups. In some areas the packs are isolated and don't have access to other coyotes. Environmentalists say the same thing about wolves but also tell us that hunting will reduce their numbers. Not convinced.
Quote from: konradcountry on November 04, 2020, 07:33:56 PMQuote from: nwwanderer on October 04, 2020, 07:48:19 PMThe bad news is the more you kill the more pups they have. That is what environmentalists tell us but it doesn't make any sense. Perhaps it is true that if you shoot the alpha female then the beta will have more pups. Well there isn't always another female and if you shoot both females then there won't be more pups. In some areas the packs are isolated and don't have access to other coyotes. Environmentalists say the same thing about wolves but also tell us that hunting will reduce their numbers. Not convinced.I agree. How can killing them make more of them. We manage the deer population by killing a bunch of them every year. Does it not work the same with coyotes? I would like to see the study that scientifically proves that they have more pups when the population is lower and how that will make the population of coyotes grow.I shoot all of them that I can in my neighborhood. I feel like I am helping keep the population down. I know that every one that I kill will not be able to kill our little dog or any cats, or fawns.
Boat load of coyote research out there, might start with Guy Connolly. Have read a fair bit but mostly have watched the dogs and research mostly agrees, when coyote numbers are down pup numbers go up. Whether you shot them, mange wiped out a bunch, distemper killed them, parvo showed up or APHIS was involved coyotes are amazing at filling as void
I have coyote problems where small livestock, dogs and cats have been picked off over the years. I shoot a LOT of them from my place and yes the numbers never really seem to go down much. However, I've noticed they seem less packed-up and confrontational after the mature males are shot. We had a pack that was taunting and luring our dogs and passing through our yard on a routine basis. I shot the big male that was deep chested and rounder of tooth and we never heard from them again. Other hand, once we had a taunting pack and I shot the decoy (male of the year - odd because it's usually a bitch). That pack kept coming around until I'd shot an older female a week later.I think the pack dynamics depend on the mature animals and if I can keep it a revolving door of younger coyotes, so much the better for the deer and domestic dogs. They pack up pretty hard with the winter cold but after a few big ones get shot, it's more often that I seem them alone and mousing.
The anti-hunting argument is that they have more pups if you kill the alpha female. Well how do know if you killed the alpha female? Odds are you didn't. This argument also makes a strange assumption that you just kill one female and then you are done hunting. Wouldn't the conclusion be that you need to either kill at least 2 females or not hunt them?It just seems awfully convenient. Killing them increases their population? So doing nothing will reduce their population? How did their population expand in the first place? The anti-hunting Humane Society makes this argument and they don't provide a source. https://www.humanesociety.org/resources/why-killing-coyotes-doesnt-workSmells like BS.
So shoot 3 or 4 (even better all) females in the pack. Then no females left, to have litters.Since I could not tell you how to identify the females, just shoot them all.Problem solved even if it is temporary before another pack comes in, the deer, elk, and other critters will thank you!
Killing more leads to more coyotes..,to a point. In some cases that is true but its not so linear. LOTS of coyotes in an area compete for resources. That can lead to more stress and less food. In turn leading to smaller litter sizes. So you kill off a few coyotes in an area. Well that means more resources for the ones that are left and litter sizes increase. More resources can lead to better pup survival rates and so on. At some point though the hunting pressure will outpace reproduction. It would just take killing lots more than most areas get and would probably need trapping and hunting to reach that level of population control. The argument from anti hunters is that is a reason to stop hunting them. An unhunted population will mean more competition for resources, fighting, smaller litters, lower pup survival and disease spread. Pretty *censored*ty to wish that on coyotes in my opinion. Better to harvest the abundant resource leaving healthier more people weary coyotes behind.