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The Predator Paradox

Ending the War with Wolves, Bears, Cougars, and Coyotes

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
An expert in wildlife management tells the stories of those who are finding new ways for humans and mammalian predators to coexist.
 
Stories of backyard bears and cat-eating coyotes are becoming increasingly common—even for people living in non-rural areas. Farmers anxious to protect their sheep from wolves aren’t the only ones concerned: suburbanites and city dwellers are also having more unwanted run-ins with mammalian predators.
And that might not be a bad thing. After all, our government has been at war with wildlife since 1914, and the death toll has been tremendous: federal agents kill a combined ninety thousand wolves, bears, coyotes, and cougars every year, often with dubious biological effectiveness. Only recently have these species begun to recover. Given improved scientific understanding and methods, can we continue to slow the slaughter and allow populations of mammalian predators to resume their positions as keystone species?
As carnivore populations increase, however, their proximity to people, pets, and livestock leads to more conflict, and we are once again left to negotiate the uneasy terrain between elimination and conservation. In The Predator Paradox, veteran wildlife management expert John Shivik argues that we can end the war while still preserving and protecting these key species as fundamental components of healthy ecosystems. By reducing almost sole reliance on broad scale “death from above” tactics and by incorporating nonlethal approaches to managing wildlife—from electrified flagging to motion-sensor lights—we can dismantle the paradox, have both people and predators on the landscape, and ensure the long-term survival of both.
As the boundary between human and animal habitat blurs, preventing human-wildlife conflict depends as much on changing animal behavior as on changing our own perceptions, attitudes, and actions. To that end, Shivik focuses on the facts, mollifies fears, and presents a variety of tools and tactics for consideration.
Blending the science of the wild with entertaining and dramatic storytelling, Shivik’s clear-eyed pragmatism allows him to appeal to both sides of the debate, while arguing for the possibility of coexistence: between ranchers and environmentalists, wildlife managers and animal-welfare activists, and humans and animals.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 10, 2014
      Shivik, a leader in the field of nonlethal predator control, lays out the difficulties in supporting healthy predator populations while trying to protect humans, as North Americans are “on a collision course with remaining and rebounding populations of wolves, bears, cougars, and coyotes.” Although humans are far more likely to be killed by a deer than one of its natural predators, we instinctively fear the latter. The argument against killing predators arose with the environmental movement, and Shivik addresses that history, the concerns of farmers, and the American sense of entitlement of cheap food. He follows researchers of predator behavior as they attempt to develop means of dissuading the animals from killing livestock and frequenting human recreation and living areas. Shivik notes, “While effective nonlethal methods for preventing predation exist, there is no one-size-fits-all solution.” Dealing with the wildlife is only part of the equation, as “managing animals is difficult, but managing people is hell.” Predators provide tremendous benefits to ecosystems, but there are “costs and difficulties of managing them.” Shivik concludes with the hopeful example of Churchill, Manitoba, where polar bear tourism tenuously coexists with town life without resort to lethal force. Both ranchers and predator advocates will have something to learn from Shivik’s survey.

    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2014
      Biologist and wildlife management expert Shivik unravels the hydra-headed conundrum confronting ranchers and urban and rural individuals seeking solutions for controlling wolves, bears, cougars and coyotes in the 21st-century American landscape. "The predator paradox is about the interface of humans, animals, and environment, and not about an easy, clear morality from a distance," writes the author. "It is about the people and animals that we impact, either directly or within a few degrees of separation." Each year, federal agents kill more than 90,000 wolves, bears, cougars and coyotes, and other agencies and citizens also have strong opinions concerning the role these large predators should or should not play in our lives. Often when biologists lead public hearings focused on predator control, the meetings "tend to become vituperative eruptions" rather than sessions of reasoned discourse. "How different people approach or answer those questions tells a lot about how widely fundamental human values can differ," Shivik writes. The author explores the experiments by scientists searching for methods for nonlethal control of predators, and he discusses different behaviors among the various predator groups as well as between individual animals. Shivik surveys the issue from the point of view of ranchers and farmers whose livelihoods are tied to making a living off the land, and he recounts the bloody history of predator control in the United States, describing the role played by Wildlife Services today. Ultimately, the author stresses that each of us "have a certain responsibility to understand and act on wildlife issues, rural and urban, distant and near." Shivik's style makes the science accessible and relevant for general readers. The narrative is carried by the author's insights, admonitions and the engaging profiles of those working to resolve the predator paradox.

      COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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