Coyote Attacks

Phil C. McNasty

Go Jays Go
Dec 27, 2010
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You said that they have a “reintroduction” program. Not a hunting program. I asked for a link to the some government official promoting a reintroduction program. Please provide that
I didnt mean an official re-introduction program, I meant they've allowed the coyotes to proliferate by making it difficult (or illegal) to hunt them.
They seem to enjoy a protected status now, even with the public. Read tweet below:


You also said that German Shepard’s or any dog I assume would be rounded up and exterminated? Please provide proof of that as well since we all know that when pit bulls where an issue, they never did anything like you suggest
If a dog attacks a child and causes serious injury or death they are most often put down in Ontario
 
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Jenesis

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Jul 14, 2020
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I didnt mean an official re-introduction program, I meant they've allowed the coyotes to proliferate by making it difficult (or illegal) to hunt them.
They seem to enjoy a protected status now, even with the public. Read tweet below:





If a dog attacks a child and causes serious injury or death they are most often put down in Ontario

Ok the first part, I get the miscommunication. I will look more into that. But what you said about dogs was a round up for all of the breed if they were attacking in numbers. Not the individual dogs, but exterminating the entire breed. That is what you said or at least what your post implied. Another miscommunication?
 

Phil C. McNasty

Go Jays Go
Dec 27, 2010
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Ok the first part, I get the miscommunication. I will look more into that. But what you said about dogs was a round up for all of the breed if they were attacking in numbers. Not the individual dogs, but exterminating the entire breed. That is what you said or at least what your post implied. Another miscommunication?
Take a deep breath and read what I wrote slowly again. I said:

" if there were a group of wild German Sheppards roaming the streets of Toronto periodically biting or attacking people, that clan of dogs would be rounded up immediately and exterminated".

I didnt say exterminate entire breeds of dogs, neither am I saying exterminate all Coyotes throughout the country.
I am saying Coyotes shouldnt be anywhere near large cities and preferably people should be allowed to hunt them, or at the very least they should be relocated.

The latter would be very hard and expensive to do however because you have to trap and tranquilize them, so thats probably never gonna happen
 

bmanguy

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Oct 13, 2013
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I
Take a deep breath and read what I wrote slowly again. I said:

" if there were a group of wild German Sheppards roaming the streets of Toronto periodically biting or attacking people, that clan of dogs would be rounded up immediately and exterminated".

I didnt say exterminate entire breeds of dogs, neither am I saying exterminate all Coyotes throughout the country.
I am saying Coyotes shouldnt be anywhere near large cities and preferably people should be allowed to hunt them, or at the very least they should be relocated.

The latter would be very hard and expensive to do however because you have to trap and tranquilize them, so thats probably never gonna happen

I think Blondie (Hitlers german shepherd) was part of a KLAN.
 

Josephine Grey

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Oct 2, 2017
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They should relocate the coyotes in further territories. This is our job as human being to make impact studies on the different species when we expand our cities or build infrastructure. I find it sad to just kill them like that when we are destroying everything they own. I hate human sometimes. Sorry for the dogs but this is not okay.
 
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FunTimez9999

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Jul 28, 2022
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Here's the ironic thing, if there were a group of wild German Sheppards roaming the streets of Toronto periodically biting or attacking people, that clan of dogs would be rounded up immediately and exterminated. But because these are coyotes and the government is on some weird re-introduction prgram, its somehow completely tolerated to have these wild animals roam free throughout Toronto

Fucking insane!!
Insane is right !!!! And just unbelievable!! I don't get it.
 

FunTimez9999

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Jul 28, 2022
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He could have killed that baby! Why we put coyotes before babies and people, I just don't know. That poor child. And she can get rabies from that damn animal :(
 

kherg007

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May 3, 2014
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A coyote took my parking spot off Yonge and King. Asshole.
 
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Beagle_

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Oct 9, 2006
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Take a deep breath and read what I wrote slowly again. I said:

" if there were a group of wild German Sheppards roaming the streets of Toronto periodically biting or attacking people, that clan of dogs would be rounded up immediately and exterminated".

I didnt say exterminate entire breeds of dogs, neither am I saying exterminate all Coyotes throughout the country.
I am saying Coyotes shouldnt be anywhere near large cities and preferably people should be allowed to hunt them, or at the very least they should be relocated.

The latter would be very hard and expensive to do however because you have to trap and tranquilize them, so thats probably never gonna happen

Might as well of said, “Suck on this dick.” lol 😂😂😂
 

Phil C. McNasty

Go Jays Go
Dec 27, 2010
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The wolf genes in this “coyowolf “ hybrid are given it this size and it seems to be very adaptable to urban centres
You mean coywolves?? You're probably right, it seems a bit too big for a regular coyote.
But thats even worse because coywolves are more dangerous than coyotes

 

hamermill

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Oct 2, 2001
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In a place far, far away
They should relocate the coyotes in further territories. This is our job as human being to make impact studies on the different species when we expand our cities or build infrastructure. I find it sad to just kill them like that when we are destroying everything they own. I hate human sometimes. Sorry for the dogs but this is not okay.

I know a pest control company that when they trap a raccoon relocates them to their sanctuary. The sanctuary is below grade around 2-3 feet deep. Temperature is always the same regardless of what the weather is outside. The little darlings never get wet, never sunburned. Each raccoon has its own spot so no fighting for territory.
 
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hamermill

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Oct 2, 2001
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In a place far, far away

A new and unusual theory has emerged about the coyotes that killed a young Toronto woman on a Nova Scotia hiking trail 13 years ago.

Researchers say that on Oct. 27, 2009, when singer-songwriter Taylor Mitchell set out alone in Cape Breton Highlands National Park, resident coyotes had adapted to a limited food supply by learning how to hunt and kill moose — a trait believed to be extraordinary among these "generalist carnivores."

Stanley Gehrt, lead author of a paper recently published in the Journal of Applied Ecology, said that with the park's coyotes preying on such a large animal, it stands to reason they would be less inhibited about killing a human.

"When [coyotes grow] used to taking a 700-pound animal, and you have a single woman walking by herself ... it seems perfectly natural to assume that they simply saw her as a novel food item," Gehrt, a professor at Ohio State University, said in an interview.

"Our argument would be that [the coyotes'] ability to survive ... is tied to their ability to switch from one food source to another. And those [coyotes] were eating a diet completely of moose."

Coyotes have been known to scavenge from the remains of dead moose, but Gehrt's study found evidence the park's population was actively hunting the animals — a high-risk strategy for predators that can get stomped on.

"At least one [moose] carcass located during winter coyote tracking showed signs of predation, and on other occasions, live, adult moose were observed with fresh wounds consistent with coyote bites, in addition to coyote tracks leading to the moose," says the study, which was supported by Parks Canada and the Nova Scotia Department of Lands and Forestry.

Coyotes in the park resorted to "prey-switching" because their typical prey, mainly snowshoe hare and white-tailed deer, were in short supply at the time, the study says. As well, the park's unique ecosystem supports only a small population of rodents, which can otherwise sustain coyotes that have little else to eat.

Gehrt said it's worth noting the park's coyotes are not subjected to hunting or trapping, which means they don't have a natural fear of humans.

Mitchell's violent death was only the second fatal coyote attack recorded in North America. She was 19 years old at the time and about to embark on a solo tour to support a promising musical career.

Coyotes conditioned to attack large prey

The mauling attracted international attention and wild speculation about the coyotes' behaviour. But Gehrt said he and his team determined the attack was similar to what would happen if the coyotes were after a deer.

"They had conditioned themselves to go after large prey, and this was something small," he said.

Virtually all recorded coyote attacks are the result of exposure to human food. But that wasn't the case with Mitchell. Of the five coyotes killed after the fatal attack, including the two directly responsible, none showed evidence they had eaten human food beforehand, the study says.

Gehrt stressed that the attack on Mitchell was related to the park's unique ecological characteristics, which have changed over the years. The moose population has been reduced and the snowshoe hare population has rebounded, which means live moose are no longer on the coyotes' menu.

"I don't view the coyotes in Cape Breton as being more dangerous right now than any other coyotes," he said.

As well, park staff are now less tolerant of aggressive animals.

"The Cape Breton system produces some novel types of behaviour, but it's temporary," Gehrt said. "The fact that we haven't had anything like that again puts it into context. It's manageable by increasing people's awareness. We can keep the risk extremely low."
 
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Josephine Grey

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I know a pest control company that when they trap a raccoon relocates them to their sanctuary. The sanctuary is below grade around 2-3 feet deep. Temperature is always the same regardless of what the weather is outside. The little darlings never get wet, never sunburned. Each raccoon has its own spot so no fighting for territory.
This is the sweetest thing. 💗
 

hamermill

Senior Member
Oct 2, 2001
4,383
2,363
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In a place far, far away
I know a pest control company that when they trap a raccoon relocates them to their sanctuary. The sanctuary is below grade around 2-3 feet deep. Temperature is always the same regardless of what the weather is outside. The little darlings never get wet, never sunburned. Each raccoon has its own spot so no fighting for territory.

This is the sweetest thing. 💗

You missed the part I said "The sanctuary is below grade around 2-3 feet deep" didn't you 😁 or did you?
 
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