Rule allows more hunting in some South Dakota state parks

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

South Dakota Game, Fish, and Parks
South Dakota Game, Fish, and Parks(Dakota News Now)

ByDakota News Now staff

Published: Mar. 20, 2023 at 11:02 AM PDT

https://www.dakotanewsnow.com/2023/03/20/rule-allows-more-hunting-some-south-dakota-state-parks/

PIERRE, S.D. (AP) – A new state rule will allow hunting in some parts of South Dakota state parks where it had previously been banned.

The South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks Commission finalized the rule this month that gives the division of parks and recreation the option of opening parts of the parks to hunting during shoulder season (a firearms season that occurs outside the five-week general firearms and archery seasons) in May and September, the Black Hills Pioneer reported.

Al Nedved, director of parks and recreation, said in the past firearms were restricted in state parks from May to September to avoid possible conflicts with day users and campers.

The division reviewed the parks to find areas where there is a low possibility of such conflicts and can…

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VIEWPOINT: TROPHY HUNTING, TRAPPING NEEDS A FEARLESS OPPOSITION

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

Viewpoint: Trophy hunting, trapping needs a fearless opposition

Viewpoint: Trophy hunting, trapping needs a fearless opposition

Missoula Current

Missoula CurrentPublished: March 20, 2023Joseph Scalia III

https://missoulacurrent.com/trophy-hunting-trapping/

Joseph Scalia III

With today’s rise in vicious hunting and cruel trapping practices, most arguments against it are about how many wolves or grizzly bears killed is arguably sustainable ecologically. Ought an evolved and supposedly wise civilization be allowing any trophy trapping and killing at all?

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Civil rights pioneer Myrlie Evers stresses the importance of remembering the painful past

What are the motives driving such perverse bumper stickers as a wolf in the crosshairs of a rifle scope, with the words, “Smoke a pack a day”? What is it that brings pleasure to those who display such careless language and degradation of a noble creature?

Of course, there is the enjoyment its bearers derive from disturbing their “liberal” opponents, who they…

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Earth to Hit Critical Warming Threshold by Early 2030s, Climate Panel Says

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

Story by Brad Plumer•Yesterday 8:58 AM

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Earth is likely to cross a critical threshold for global warming within the next decade, and nations will need to make an immediate and drastic shift away from fossil fuels to prevent the planet from overheating dangerously beyond that level, according to a major new report released on Monday.

Hoesung Lee, chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, speaking at the global climate talks on Nov. 6 in Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt.©Sean Gallup/Getty Images

A wide array of strategies are now available for reducing fossil-fuel emissions, such as scaling up wind and solar power.©Ryan David Brown for The New York Times

The report, by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a body of experts convened by the United Nations, offers the most comprehensive understanding to date of ways in which the planet is changing…

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Urge Wyoming Officials to Oppose Unlawful Chicken Roping Contest

Men roping a hen and pulling on rope lassoed to the hen's neck and feet
Photo by Unparalleled Suffering, Feb. 18, 2023

https://upc-online.org/entertainment/230321_urge_wyoming_officials_to_oppose_unlawful_chicken_roping_contest.html

United Poultry Concerns is urging Wyoming officials and animal protectors to join us in opposing a chicken-abusing event that we seek to eliminate. The event is a chicken roping contest conducted in a bar & grill called Dewey’s Place in Moorcroft, Wyoming. This year the chicken roping contest, which has been going on for nine miserable years, was held on Saturday night, February 18th and we sent an investigator to document it.

Participants included men, women and children as documented in text, photographs and video showing how the chickens were tormented by inebriated adults yelling and carrying on as loud music blared in a display of unabashed sadism directed at the defenseless birds on the floor at their feet. One child can be heard in the video yelling: “You’re probably killing that poor bird.” Our investigator reported:

One of the highlights of the evening was the repetition of chokings that the birds had to endure again and again. Who in the world would want to have a cord or a rope around their neck and then be hoisted into the air? What can that be other than torture? Even Renee Jean, the pro-animal exploitation Cowboy State Daily writer who published an article about this event began her article with “Saturday was not a good night to be a rooster in Moorcroft” and later on stated “it’s clearly a stressful night for them.” See It’s Not Quite Cheyenne . . .

At our request, veterinarian Dr. Nedim Buyukmihci and veterinarian Dr. George Bates reviewed the video footage and photographs and wrote to the Wyoming State Veterinarian and the Moorcroft Police Chief. Their letters can be read in full here:

From Dr. Buyukmihci’s letter:

I viewed a video of this event and observed the following treatment of the chickens:

  1. purposeful shaking and poking of an individual (presumably to agitate them)
  2. chasing and lassoing of individuals (especially around the neck)
  3. lifting of individuals off the ground, the weight of their bodies supported only by their necks
  4. pulling of individuals along the ground by their necks
  5. stretching individuals between a lasso around the neck and one around the legs

I consider all the above to be inhumane for the chickens and cruel behaviour on the part of the people. Observations 2-5 represent extreme inhumanity and cruelty. Not only were the chickens frightened and struggling to get away, they were being put at risk of severe injury, particularly of the neck, possibly even resulting death. Some of the chickens lay flat on the ground after being lassoed and hoisted into the air and dropped, no longer struggling. I could not determine if this was due to injury or the tonic immobility seen in chickens who are highly stressed or distressed.

From Dr. Bates’s letter:

I am writing out of concern about “chicken roping” contests being held at Dewey’s Place in the town of Moorcroft, Wyoming. I have reviewed testimony from an observer and video images of the event taken on 18 February 2023. In my judgment, based on what I’ve seen and heard, what is going on here clearly constitutes animal abuse. The chickens used in the event are handled inappropriately and are no doubt traumatized by being dragged and/or suspended by their necks from a rope. This, according to a witness at the event, happened multiple times to individual birds during the course of the evening on February 18. No mammal or bird, not excluding human beings, appreciates having their necks stretched by a rope and their breathing impeded or stopped by compression of the airway. Strangulation, even when it does not result in death, is never an appropriate animal handling practice, most especially when it is done purely for entertainment purposes.

The chickens in the video are clearly frightened and anxious as they are being chased around by adult men and women, and some appear at times to be stunned and unresponsive, possibly due either to hypoxia from being choked or tonic immobility (“scared stiff”). As a veterinarian I am disgusted to see any animal handled in such a cruel fashion let alone one handled that way for the sake of amusement. Were this to be done at a similar venue to more familiar domesticated animals like dogs, cats, rabbits, or parrots I’m sure the overt cruelty would become apparent to even the patrons at Dewey’s.

What Can I Do?

Not only is the chicken roping contest intentionally cruel and inhumane: it violates WY § 6-3-1002. Cruelty to animals: (iii) Knowingly carries an animal in a manner that poses undue risk of injury or death.

Please write a polite but urgent letter to the Wyoming State Veterinarian and the Moorcroft Police Chief urging them to uphold the WY state law that is violated by the chicken roping contest. Even if the chicken roping did not violate the law, which it clearly does, it could not and should not ever be condoned by law enforcement or anyone else. It is nothing but ugly bullying and mistreating of small, defenseless birds and teaching children to take pleasure in deliberate cruelty.

Contact:

Dr. Hallie Hasel
Wyoming State Veterinarian
Wyoming Livestock Board Office
1934 Wyott Drive Cheyenne, WY 82002
Phone: (307) 777-7515
Website: https://wyagric.state.wy.us/divisions/admin/contact-us
Email: hallie.hasel@wyo.gov

Bill Bryant, Police Chief
Moorcroft Police Department
104 North Big Horn Avenue
PO Box 70
Moorcroft, WY 82721
Phone: 307-756-9504
Fax: (307) 756-3323
Website: http://townofmoorcroft.com/police.aspx
Email: police@townofmoorcroft.com

Learn more about this animal abuse including our success in halting a chicken roping contest in New Mexico in 2000: Chicken Roping Contests.

Thank you for speaking out on behalf of
the littlest roping victims of inhumanity.
– United Poultry Concerns

Hen being choked by a rope around it's neck.
Photo by Unparalleled Suffering, Feb. 18, 2023

One child can be heard in the video yelling:
“You’re probably killing that poor bird.”

Hen with rope around it's neck lying flat on the ground, possibly dead, while man holding the rope laughs.
Photo by Unparalleled Suffering, Feb. 18, 2023

More From UPC


Urge Wyoming Officials to Oppose Unlawful Chicken Roping Contest


False Equivalencies Between Humans and Other Animals


Do Chickens Mind Seeing Other Chickens Killed in Their Presence?


Anthropomorphism as Activism: How to Promote Animal Liberation


Boo, a Dearly Beloved Rooster: Happy Valentine’s Day!


Can We Assume Consciousness or Happiness in Other Animals?


Vet Record: ‘The veterinary profession should not condone killing animals by heatstroke’


MIXING WITHOUT PAIN:
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UPC Winter 2023 Poultry Press ‑ Volume 32, Number 3


FOR THE BIRDS
“Can Only Be Described with Superlatives”
– Animal Culture Magazine

Alliance to End
Chickens As Kaparos

EndChickensAsKaporos.com


Vegan Starter Kit
Great Recipes & More
Order Printed Copies!

United Poultry Concerns

www.upc-online.org

Letter to the editor: I’ve seen the cruelty of trapping

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

ByOpinion

Share https://vtdigger.org/2023/03/19/letter-to-the-editor-ive-seen-the-cruelty-of-trapping/

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Letters to the editor are brief reader responses to stories and opinion pieces published by VTDigger. Letters give voice to community members and do not represent VTDigger’s views. To submit a letter, completethis form.

I was a Vermont veterinarian for 45 years and I saw so many instances of this horrible practice that it brings tears to my eyes when I remember them.

My own daughter’s dog was caught in a trap on the property of a friend who did not know the trapper. Luckily, I was hiking with a friend who was stronger than I, so we were able to release the dog.

It is a cruel, unnecessary practice that should be banned.

Jean Ceglowski, DVM

Rupert

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UN calls for mass fossil fuel shutdowns to prevent ‘climate time bomb’

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

UN secretary-general calls for ‘ceasing all licensing or funding of new oil and gas’ and ‘stopping any expansion of existing oil and gas reserves’

By Thomas Catenacci | Fox News

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/un-calls-mass-fossil-fuel-shutdowns-prevent-climate-time-bomb

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Granholm says US can ‘learn’ from China on climate change

The United Nations (U.N.) published its latest climate change report Monday, which doubled down onglobal warming-related risksand which the intergovernmental organization dubbed a “survival guide for humanity.”

The synthesis report, assembled by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), represents the U.N.’s latest attempt to sound the alarm on the risks posed by climate change and not taking aggressiveactions to halt global warming. According to the document, “unsustainable energy and land use” has caused the world to warm 1.1 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, close to the 1.5-degree emergency threshold.

“The rate of temperature rise in…

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Cut emissions quickly to save lives, scientists warn in a new U.N. report

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

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March 20, 20239:00 AM ET

https://www.npr.org/2023/03/20/1162711459/cut-emissions-quickly-to-save-lives-scientists-warn-in-a-new-u-n-report

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Residents in southern Malawi repair a home destroyed by heavy rain from Cyclone Freddy. Climate change is causing cyclones and hurricanes to get more intense and dangerous.

Thoko Chikondi/AP

The planet is on track for catastrophic warming, but world leaders already have many options to reduce greenhouse gas pollution and protect people, according to a major new climate change report from the United Nations.

The report was drafted by top climate scientists and reviewed by delegates from nearly 200 countries. The authors hope it will provide crucial guidance to politicians around the world ahead of negotiations later this year aimed at reining in climate change.

The planet faces an increasingly dire situation, according to the report. Climate change is already disrupting daily life around the world. Extreme weather…

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NYSDEC Now Admits Cooperstown Wolf Was A Wild Wolf

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

byPeter Bauer

87 Comments

gray wolf was one of the top 10 stories from 2022

After a large 85-pound canid was shot by a hunter in Otsego County in December 2021, the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) announced that the animal was a coyote. Despite possessing wolf-like size and physical characteristics—and the hunter’s own belief that he had mistakenly shot a wolf—DEC claimed that a DNA analysis showed that the animal was just a large coyote and cited the DNA study in its press comments.Mike Lynch at theAdirondack Explorerreported in July 2022 that DEC had a DNA analysis that showed the Cooperstown wolf was “closely identified as an Eastern coyote, with a mix of coyote, wolf, and dog genetics.”WTEN News 10in Albany reported the story with a quote fromLori Severino, a DEC spokesperson, saying “Initial DNA analysis conducted determined the wild canid to be most closely identified as an eastern coyote.”

Though requested to…

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KILLING COYOTES IS AN INEFFECTIVE MANAGEMENT TOOL AND HAS CONTRIBUTED TO EXPANSION OF COYOTE TERRITORY

Exposing the Big Game's avatarExposing the Big Game

NEWS PROVIDED BY

AMB

March 17, 2023, 15:26 GMT

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    https://www.einnews.com/pr_news/622820551/killing-coyotes-is-an-ineffective-management-tool-and-has-contributed-to-expansion-of-coyote-territory

A coyote basks in the sun. Credit: Dan Licht Cinematographer

Study of coyotes in new documentary ‘American Bolshevik’ shows human-provided food sources drive conflicts; lethal control often results in greater conflict.

When you have unsecured food sources associated with people, coyotes like to hang around, especially when you have some closet feeders embedded in the neighborhood.”

— Dr. Numi Mitchell

NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES, March 17, 2023 /EINPresswire.com/ — ‘American Bolshevik,’ the award-winning documentary from Lemon Martini Productions, explores conflicts with coyotes and the forces that have caused the expansion of their territory throughout the United States. The film is available onAmazon,Apple TV, Google Play, and VUDU in the US, Canada, and other countries.

The feature length film reveals that conflicts are primarily driven by…

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KILLING COYOTES IS AN INEFFECTIVE MANAGEMENT TOOL AND HAS CONTRIBUTED TO EXPANSION OF COYOTE TERRITORY

NEWS PROVIDED BY

AMB

March 17, 2023, 15:26 GMT

SHARE THIS ARTICLE

    https://www.einnews.com/pr_news/622820551/killing-coyotes-is-an-ineffective-management-tool-and-has-contributed-to-expansion-of-coyote-territory

A coyote basks in the sun. Credit: Dan Licht Cinematographer

Study of coyotes in new documentary ‘American Bolshevik’ shows human-provided food sources drive conflicts; lethal control often results in greater conflict.

When you have unsecured food sources associated with people, coyotes like to hang around, especially when you have some closet feeders embedded in the neighborhood.”

— Dr. Numi Mitchell

NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES, March 17, 2023 /EINPresswire.com/ — ‘American Bolshevik,’ the award-winning documentary from Lemon Martini Productions, explores conflicts with coyotes and the forces that have caused the expansion of their territory throughout the United States. The film is available on AmazonApple TV, Google Play, and VUDU in the US, Canada, and other countries.

The feature length film reveals that conflicts are primarily driven by human activities such as intentional or inadvertent feeding of coyotes, which can condition these wild animals to lose their fear of humans and results in greater numbers of coyotes.

“Coyotes reproduce more and have more offspring if they have a lot of food. If they don’t have a lot of food they drop their own population,” states Dr. Numi Mitchell of the Narragansett Bay Coyote Study (NBCS) in Rhode Island. The study found that the food that was making coyotes so abundant was being provided by local residents. “We found piles of dead livestock on farms that would sustain a coyote group all winter long. Feral cat colonies were a surprise. Coyotes learned, just as the cats do, that the lady comes every day and drops off food. Coyotes also eat garbage and compost. When you have unsecured food sources associated with people, coyotes like to hang around, especially when you have some closet feeders embedded in the neighborhood.”

The NBCS began nearly two decades ago in response to an increase in sightings and conflicts with coyotes on Aquidneck Island, which encompasses the tony resort city of Newport, Rhode Island, known for its sailing, polo, and music festivals. As a result of this ground-breaking study, each of the towns on Aquidneck Island have enacted “no-feeding ordinances” to ensure that residents are not conditioning coyotes to overcome their natural wariness of humans. The towns also actively educate residents on strategies to reduce conflict, including “hazing” to limit future contact.

Woven between this modern-day conflict with coyotes, American Bolshevik tells the story of the coyote’s expansion into New England long after the slaughter of the native wolf species. The film follows a century of escalating attempts to eradicate the species as detailed by historian Dan Flores, The New York Times best-selling author of Coyote America.

“Coyotes are fission-fusion animals,” explains Dr. Flores in the film, meaning that they are one of only a few species that can function either within groups or as individuals. “Whenever they go into fission mode as a result of being persecuted, what they often end up doing is scattering across the landscape and colonizing new places. By wiping out wolves in Eastern America we had basically opened up the niche for a mid-sized canid predator. And when the attempt to poison coyotes in the West had triggered their fission-fusion reaction, coyotes had begun colonizing into the South and the East where this niche for a mid-sized predator remained open.”

Today an estimated 500,000 coyotes are slaughtered annually in the United States in the name of “wildlife management,” often through inhumane killing contests and practices such as leg hold traps, aerial shooting, and poisoning, according to Camilla Fox, Executive Director of advocacy organization Project Coyote. “Killing coyotes has never, and will never work to manage them,” states conservation biologist Chris Schadler, Co-Founder of the New Hampshire Wildlife Coalition, who recounts her years of successfully farming sheep amidst coyotes. The adverse effects of lethal control on the local level is explained by Dr. Mitchell of NBCS. “The alpha male and alpha female are the primary defenders of the pack territory. If you bring a hunter in and shoot coyotes, it’s basically shooting holes in the fence. If a resident bunch is shot out, it’s anarchy. All those coyotes start flowing into the void and you end up with more coyotes than you had to begin with,” says Dr. Mitchell. There is also a biological response to killing coyotes, she notes, as coyote litter sizes will increase to compensate.

According to the experts interviewed in the film, coyotes can bring many benefits to their communities, and there are evidence-based strategies for successful coexistence with coyotes. These include diligently eliminating human-provided food sources, hazing to reinforce fear of humans, and ensuring pets are kept on leashes, particularly during denning season.

Lila Kerns
AMB