Prarie Dogs

R. Richard

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The folowing article that I ripped off the AP newswire illustrates yet another wrongheaded approach to a problem. The government thinks there are too many prarie dogs. Ferrets eat prairie dogs (not in the sexual sense here). The preferred solution is not poison but a motivational video for the ferrets! Use a natural, nor chemical, solution. JMHO!

Feds Poison Prairie Dogs to Save Ferrets

By COLLEEN SLEVIN, Associated Press Writer

DENVER - The federal government will begin poisoning prairie dogs in southwestern South Dakota next week after reaching a deal with conservationists designed to protect the endangered black-footed ferret.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (news - web sites) agreed to distribute poison on only 5,000 acres instead of about 8,000 acres in the Buffalo Gap National Grasslands, including the Conata Basin, where more than half of the nation's 400 wild ferrets live.

Following complaints from neighboring ranchers that prairie dogs are spreading onto their property, federal officials plan to lay out poisoned oats on Monday.

Eight conservation groups sued, fearing some ferrets, which depend on prairie dogs for 90 percent of their diet, would also die. Both sides began negotiating a settlement last week at the urging of a judge.

The land excluded under the deal includes prairie dog towns where ferrets have been spotted. It reduces from one mile to a half-mile the buffer zone where the poisoning will take place in some areas.

In the future, the federal government also agreed to consider non-lethal methods of controlling prairie dogs and to study the impact of poisoning before moving ahead with another round.

Conservation groups were still upset that prairie dogs will be killed, but they said the settlement points the way toward a more permanent solution to the tension between ranching and wildlife.

"We hope to replicate those (solutions) in the future once we can show here how they work," said Jonathan Proctor of the Predator Conservation Alliance, one of the plaintiffs.

The conservation groups had sought to stop next week's poisoning until the impact on ferrets could be sorted out. But, because prairie dogs on the neighboring private land had already been poisoned, the government said it need to act quickly to prevent the animals from spreading onto the ranches before snow started to fall.

Critics worried that ferrets could die if they eat the bait or if they eat prairie dogs who have been poisoned.

Under the deal, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will decide whether to move any ferrets discovered in areas slated for poisoning. If the agency decides to keep them there, no poison can be left in the area.
 
Good grief. Imagine how the minutes of those meetings read. I'd poison the bureaucrats.

Perdita :rolleyes:
 
We short-circuit nature, try to fix it, make it worse, and never learn.



R. Richard said:
The folowing article that I ripped off the AP newswire illustrates yet another wrongheaded approach to a problem. The government thinks there are too many prarie dogs. Ferrets eat prairie dogs (not in the sexual sense here). The preferred solution is not poison but a motivational video for the ferrets! Use a natural, nor chemical, solution. JMHO!

Feds Poison Prairie Dogs to Save Ferrets

By COLLEEN SLEVIN, Associated Press Writer

DENVER - The federal government will begin poisoning prairie dogs in southwestern South Dakota next week after reaching a deal with conservationists designed to protect the endangered black-footed ferret.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (news - web sites) agreed to distribute poison on only 5,000 acres instead of about 8,000 acres in the Buffalo Gap National Grasslands, including the Conata Basin, where more than half of the nation's 400 wild ferrets live.

Following complaints from neighboring ranchers that prairie dogs are spreading onto their property, federal officials plan to lay out poisoned oats on Monday.

Eight conservation groups sued, fearing some ferrets, which depend on prairie dogs for 90 percent of their diet, would also die. Both sides began negotiating a settlement last week at the urging of a judge.

The land excluded under the deal includes prairie dog towns where ferrets have been spotted. It reduces from one mile to a half-mile the buffer zone where the poisoning will take place in some areas.

In the future, the federal government also agreed to consider non-lethal methods of controlling prairie dogs and to study the impact of poisoning before moving ahead with another round.

Conservation groups were still upset that prairie dogs will be killed, but they said the settlement points the way toward a more permanent solution to the tension between ranching and wildlife.

"We hope to replicate those (solutions) in the future once we can show here how they work," said Jonathan Proctor of the Predator Conservation Alliance, one of the plaintiffs.

The conservation groups had sought to stop next week's poisoning until the impact on ferrets could be sorted out. But, because prairie dogs on the neighboring private land had already been poisoned, the government said it need to act quickly to prevent the animals from spreading onto the ranches before snow started to fall.

Critics worried that ferrets could die if they eat the bait or if they eat prairie dogs who have been poisoned.

Under the deal, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will decide whether to move any ferrets discovered in areas slated for poisoning. If the agency decides to keep them there, no poison can be left in the area.
 
Hell we had a great cure for this. My father and I would go out and snare as many Gophers as we could in one day, keeping them alive in their own seperate cages while doing so, then stuff them through the pet doors of the local animal rights activists that night. They soon became intolernat of the little beasts. (Not too mention us.)

A great way to reduce the population of Gophers, (Prairy Dogs,) is to have a limited hunt for them. The hunting is limited to the local Police and National Guard. This serves two purposes. It reduces the population of the critters while increasing the accuracy of the militaries and local law enforcements shooting. Both are comendable.

Cat

(And yes I know I just pissed off a bunch of so called Tree Huggers.)
 
SeaCat said:
Hell we had a great cure for this. My father and I would go out and snare as many Gophers as we could in one day, keeping them alive in their own seperate cages while doing so, then stuff them through the pet doors of the local animal rights activists that night. They soon became intolernat of the little beasts. (Not too mention us.)

A great way to reduce the population of Gophers, (Prairy Dogs,) is to have a limited hunt for them. The hunting is limited to the local Police and National Guard. This serves two purposes. It reduces the population of the critters while increasing the accuracy of the militaries and local law enforcements shooting. Both are comendable.

Cat

(And yes I know I just pissed off a bunch of so called Tree Huggers.)

Not at all. Your compassion is inspiring.
 
"If the prairie dog goes, so goes an entire ecosystem."

The key word here is ecosystem. In the past, the blackfooted ferret kept the prairie dog population withing limits. With the blackfooted ferret still near extinction, the prairie dog population has exploded to the point where the prairie dogs have become a real problem. Poisoning is not the answer, more blackfooted ferrets are the answer.

A similar problem occurred on an island of the California coast. Some idiot released deer on the island. With no predators, the deer bred until they were diseased and starving. Finally, hunters had to be brought in to "kill Bambi." It was a mess.

There needs to be a balance between predators and prey so that the ecosystem can really function.

JMHO.
 
R. Richard said:
"If the prairie dog goes, so goes an entire ecosystem." . . .

There needs to be a balance between predators and prey so that the ecosystem can really function.

JMHO.

Yes.

There is a similar problem in Upper Michigan involving the seagulls. Because of less commercial fishing allowed, the hordes of gulls which used to survive on "fish guts" from the cleaned fish had to move further inland.

They have become quite the scavengers now at restaurants and rest stops. Officials discussed poisoning them a few years back but public outcry was enormous. It is still a bit interesting to see a McDonalds with seagulls hanging out on the roof, seriously hunting your french fries.

During deer season in Michigan the problem is easy to solve. Officials track deer growth and just increase the number of allowable tags hunters can buy, thus controlling the population.

But what to do about prairie dogs? They are everywhere, and the last time we drove to Colorado I actually hit one on the highway. (Damn things - they were playing chicken with my car, constantly running across in front of us, until finally the last one was so close I couldn't help but hit it.) :eek: Oops.

Controlled shooting of the rodents (or trapping and then killing them) would cause less damage to every other animal and the environment itself.
 
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