Losing Good Neighbors
FOR THE SAFETY of all residents and due to an increase in “disturbing coyote encounters,” the animals would have to be trapped and removed, an email from my apartment complex announced last June. Some of my neighbors had been sending emails detailing alarming encounters with the canids. When I heard howling or yipping at night, on the other hand, I opened my windows and listened. Access to flora and fauna was one of the reasons I chose this apartment, which sits on a large parcel of land next to a golf course and the Willamette River. Migrating geese rest on the neighboring rooftop, bald eagles perch in the Douglas fir trees, and, yes, coyotes roam the grounds. As dense human neighborhoods sprawl closer to wildlife, this type of human-nonhuman crossover in urban areas is becoming more prevalent. But this can be dangerous when we humans do nothing to understand the wildlife and expect animals to play by our rules. Earth Island’s Project Coyote estimates that half a million coyotes are killed every year in the United States, but this could be an undercount. In states like Oregon, private landowners who deem a coyote on their property to be a “nuisance animal” can trap and remove them at any time, without a permit or the need to report it to local agencies. “Remove” is a euphemism: These “removed” animals aren’t let out somewhere else to frolic and live out their lives. They are killed. In her latest column, Tove Danovich writes about how many people want to move into the so-called Wildland-Urban Interface, where they can live close to nature, yet they don’t want to learn how to live with their wild neighbors.
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