When is a wildlife refuge not a refuge for wildlife? When its
caretakers allow, even hire, people to kill animals within its
territory. The latest example occurred at the Monomoy Wildlife
Refuge in Massachusetts, where for the fourth straight year the
federal government has hired a sharpshooter to kill coyotes.
In April 2002, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS),
the agency that oversees National Wildlife Refuges,
commissioned a Department of Agriculture Wildlife Services
sharpshooter to kill a litter of ten pups on South Monomoy
Island, one of two islands that make up the wildlife refuge
located at the "elbow" of Cape Cod. Six pups were killed on the
spot, and the other four were held at Monomoy headquarters for
a researcher who had told refuge managers that he wanted to do
a behavioral study of the young animals. One died while in
captivity, and the remaining three were shot when officials
discovered the researcher no longer wanted the pups.
The parents were seen near the den and although they eluded
the sharpshooter, they may now be shot on sight by refuge
employees. The shootings are part of FWS's six-year "avian
diversity" project at Monomoy, in which officials protect the
refuge's endangered and threatened sea birds by killing
potential predators. The project began in 1996 when FWS
poisoned more than 5,000 black-backed and herring gulls, which
tend to drive away other nesting birds.
The Monomoy Wildlife Refuge hosts one of the largest
populations of common and least terns on the Atlantic seaboard.
Some 7,800 tern nests were counted last year on South Monomoy
Island, up from 641 in 1997. While neither one of those species
is considered endangered, they do share their nesting areas
with the roseate tern, an endangered species. The piping
plover, a threatened species, also nests on South Monomoy.
In choosing to kill the predators of these sea birds, the
FWS is essentially dismissing alternatives to lethal control,
not to mention research that indicates such deadly methods
produce only temporary boosts to ground-nesting bird
populations. The fact is, the decline in both the roseate tern
and the piping plover populations is due mostly to habitat
loss, not predators.
Yet, the FWS continues to scapegoat coyotes rather than
tackle the much larger, more complex issue. Every year for the
past four years now, refuge officials wait until a pair of
coyotes produces a litter of pups. Then they send in the
sharpshooter to kill the pups as well as the parents and any
other adults in the area. Officials believe this is the only
way to ensure that no other reproductive coyotes will establish
a territory on the island in the current season.
The HSUS has offered to help pay for fencing to protect the
terns and plover from coyotes and other predators. The HSUS has
even offered volunteers to erect and maintain the exclusion
fencing. However, the FWS has repeatedly rejected our
assistance, claiming the cost would still be prohibitive.
The government's refusal to consider a humane, nonlethal,
long-term solution has inspired local outrage. Several past and
current public officials have spoken out against these
practices, while activists in Chatham, Massachusetts, and
scientists have argued that a refuge should provide sanctuary
for all wildlife as well as a naturally functioning ecosystem
that includes both predators and prey.
What You Can Do
Call and/or write your U.S. Representative and Senators and
ask them to oppose the killing of coyote pups on Monomoy
National Wildlife Refuge. Ask them to support non-lethal
approaches to protecting the roseate tern and piping
plover.