Tools
Change country:

The meat industry’s war on wildlife

A coyote in the El Capitan meadow area at sunrise in Yosemite National Park. | Mark Boster/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Your taxes fundan obscure government program that kills millions of wild animals to benefit Big Ag.

A red fox killed with a cyanide bomb. A gray wolf gunned down from an airplane. A jackrabbit caught in a neck snare. These are just a few of the 1.45 million animals poisoned, shot, and trapped last year by the euphemistically named Wildlife Services, a little-known but particularly brutal program of the US Department of Agriculture.

The program kills wildlife for many reasons, including poisoning birds to prevent them from striking airplanes and destroying beavers that sneak onto golf courses. But one of the primary purposes of the mostly taxpayer-funded $286 million program is to serve as the meat and dairy industries’ on-call pest control service.

“We were the hired gun of the livestock industry,” said Carter Niemeyer, who worked in Wildlife Services and related programs from 1975 to 2006. Niemeyer specialized in killing and trapping predators like coyotes and wolves that were suspected of killing farmed cattle and sheep.

Wildlife Services has also killed hundreds of endangered gray wolves, threatened grizzly bears, and highly endangered Mexican gray wolves, often at the behest of the livestock industry and enabled by exemptions from the Endangered Species Act.

The top three species Wildlife Services killed in 2023 were European starlings, feral pigs, and coyotes, according to data released last month. How these animals were targeted — from shooting coyotes to poisoning birds — has prompted Congress to fund nonlethal initiatives within the program and conservation groups to call for sweeping changes to how Wildlife Services operates. The USDA didn’t respond to several questions sent via email.

“God was our only witness out there,” Niemeyer said about agents killing animals in the field. “You just hope that everybody makes [choices] morally and ethically acceptable and as humane as possible.”

To Wildlife Services’ credit, the vast majority of its work entails nonlethally scaring animals off. Controversy, though, has dogged the program for decades, as critics like Niemeyer and other former employees say much of its predator killing is unnecessary, imprecise, and inhumane. Conservation groups say it’s ecologically destructive, as such predators are crucial to ecosystem health and biodiversity.

Predator hysteria, explained

Adrian Treves, an environmental science professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said the origins of today’s rampant predator killing can be found in America’s early European settlers, who brought with them the mentality that wolves were “superpredators,” posing a dangerous threat to humans. “We’ve been fed this story that the eradication of wolves was necessary for livestock production,” he said.

Today, Wildlife Services’ most controversial work is its killings of coyotes and other predators for the supposed threat they pose to American ranchers and the food supply. But according to a USDA estimate, predation accounted for just 4.7 percent of cattle mortality in 2015. Conservation groups say that figure is exaggerated because it’s based on self-reported data from ranchers and shoddy methodology.

According to an analysis of USDA data by the Humane Society of the United States, predation accounts for only 0.3 percent of cattle mortality. (Disclosure: I worked at the Humane Society of the United States from 2012 to 2017 on unrelated agricultural issues.)

The Humane Society points to several flaws in the USDA data, including the fact that ranchers reported livestock predation from grizzly bears in six states that don’t have any grizzly bears. In the Northern Rocky Mountains region, the rate of livestock predation reported by ranchers was 27 times higher than data provided by the US Fish and Wildlife Service, which had actually confirmed livestock deaths by predators.

“When I first went to work, there was just sort of this acceptance that if a rancher called and he said he had a coyote problem, we assumed that [he] had a coyote problem,” Niemeyer said. “We didn’t question it. I didn’t see a lot of meticulous necropsy work done” to investigate the cause of death. The numbers reported to the USDA by ranchers, he now believes, are “exaggerated and embellished.”

 USDA-APHIS A coyote caught in a foothold trap.

The USDA financially compensates ranchers for livestock killed by wolves and some other species, which can create an incentive to attribute farm animal deaths to predators. Robert Gosnell, a former director of New Mexico’s USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service who administered the state’s Wildlife Services program, told the Intercept in 2022 that the agency’s field inspectors had been ordered to report livestock deaths as “wolf kills” for ranchers. “My guys in the field were going and rubber-stamping anything those people asked them to,” Gosnell said.

Niemeyer is not opposed to killing individual coyotes or wolves suspected of killing a particular cow or sheep. But much of Wildlife Services’ predator control, he said (and another former employee has alleged), is done preventively in an attempt to reduce coyote populations.

“Every coyote is suspected of potentially being a killer,” Niemeyer said, which he characterizes as coyote or wolf “hysteria.”

Last year, 68,000 coyotes were taken down by a variety of means, including ingestion of Compound 1080, a poison that causes acute pain in the form of heart blockage, respiratory failure, hallucinations, and convulsions.

Thousands more animals are killed as collateral damage. Last year, over 2,000 were killed unintentionally, a consequence of setting out untold numbers of traps and baited cyanide bombs. These devices have also injured a small number of humans and, between 2000 and 2012, killed more than 1,100 dogs.

Some employees have died on the job, and there have even been allegations of orders within the agency to cover up unintentional kills of pets and a federally protected golden eagle.

A hawk on grassy ground with its wings spread and mouth open because its foot is caught in a snare. USDA-APHIS A hawk caught in a trap.

An irrational bias against predators has made it hard for Americans, and its regulators, to recognize predators’ many ecological and social benefits. One study in Wisconsin, for example, found that wild wolf populations keep deer away from roadways, which in turn reduces costly, and sometimes deadly, car crashes.

And killing predators may, counterintuitively, lead to more livestock deaths, Treves said.

Some predator species that experience mass killing events may compensate by having more babies at younger ages. That could partly explain why, when wolf killings increased in some Western states, livestock predation went up, too. And when you wipe out some animals, others may fill the void. Coyotes significantly expanded their range in the 1900s after America’s centuries-long wolf extermination campaign.

Finally, Treves said, killing suspected predators from one ranch may simply drive the remaining population into neighboring ranches. One study he co-authored on wolf kills in Michigan found “a three times elevation of risk to livestock on neighboring properties after a farm received lethal control of wolves from Wildlife Services.”

Agricultural sprawl and the war on “invasive” species

Wildlife Services represents yet another example of the USDA’s seeming indifference to animal welfare, but it also highlights a little-known fact of human-wildlife conflict: Most of it stems from agriculture.

Almost half of the contiguous United States is now used for meat, dairy, and egg production — most of it cattle-grazing — which has crowded out wildlife and reduced biodiversity. And whenever wild animals end up on farmland that was once their habitat, they run the risk of being poisoned, shot, or trapped by Wildlife Services.

That’s true for animals that find their way onto fruit, vegetable, and nut orchards for a snack, too. But Wildlife Services’ primary goal is to protect the interests of livestock producers, USDA public affairs specialist Tanya Espinosa told me in an email — yet another subsidy for an already highly subsidized industry.

While much of the criticism lobbed at Wildlife Services pertains to its treatment of charismatic megafauna like coyotes, bears, and wolves, little attention is paid to the European starling, Wildlife Services’ most targeted species. Starlings accounted for a little over half of all animals killed by Wildlife Services, at 814,310 birds.

Starlings, which are targeted because they like to feast on grain at dairy farms and cattle feedlots, are mostly mass-poisoned with DRC-1339, also known as Starlicide, which destroys their heart and kidney function, slowly and excruciatingly killing them over the course of three to 80 hours. It’s not uncommon for towns across the US to suddenly find thousands of starlings dropping dead out of trees or raining from the sky.

Despite these deaths, starlings receive little sympathy — even from bird enthusiasts — given its status as an “invasive” species, a term often invoked to justify excluding a species from moral consideration, according to Australian ecologist Arian Wallach.

Here too, as with predators, we may be in need of a reframe, or at least a broadening of our often one-track conversation about nonnative species like feral pigs and starlings.

“In no way does the starling imagine itself as an invasive species — that is a human construction,” said Natalie Hofmeister, an assistant professor of ecology at the University of Michigan and author of the forthcoming book Citizen Starling.

Rethinking mass killing

Despite Wildlife Services’ high kill counts, it has expanded its use of nonlethal methods in recent years, including guard dogs, electric fencing, audio/visual deterrents, bird repellent research, and fladry — tying flags along fences, which can scare off some predator species.

“The last three years have shown a little bit of a turning of the tide for Wildlife Services,” said Collette Adkins, carnivore conservation director of the advocacy group Center for Biological Diversity. “There’s been more focus on preventing conflicts versus the Band-Aid of killing animals.”

 Matt Moyer/Getty Images A range rider in Montana hangs fladry — long red flags attached to fencing — to scare away livestock predators.

Treves agrees, but is skeptical there will be meaningful change. Most importantly, he wants to see Wildlife Services experimentally test its lethal methods to see if they actually prevent livestock predation.

“I am cynical,” he said. “I am frustrated that this is 20 years of arguing with this agency that’s entrenched, stubborn, and will not listen to the people who disagree with them.”

There are no easy answers here. While much of Wildlife Services’ work is ecologically ruinous and unjustifiably cruel, wild animals do inflict real damage on our food supply. Better management on the part of farmers and ranchers and further USDA investment into nonlethal methods could help. Even better would be to rethink the USDA’s — and the meat industry’s — license to wage war on wildlife.

A version of this story originally appeared in the Future Perfect newsletter. Sign up here!


Read full article on: vox.com
Obi Toppin has chance to help end Knicks’ season in Game 7
It could be Obi’s Revenge. 
nypost.com
The Iconic Memphis Label Behind Music’s Most Soulful Stars
Howard L. Bingham“We were flying by the seat of our pants,” Stax legend William Bell recently recalled of the early days of the venerable label that tracked the rise of the civil rights movement. “A lot of us came in from the gospel arena, right out of church, just neighborhood kids. We learned how to craft a song as young kids, 14, 15 years old, b
thedailybeast.com
Olivia Munn documented cancer journey for son to show him 'I tried my best' if she 'didn't make it'
Olivia Munn opened up about why she decided to document her cancer journey. Munn said that she wanted to show her son Malcolm that she "fought to be here" in case she "didn't make it."
foxnews.com
Kyle Finnegan’s rare hiccup helps Phillies to a 4-3 win in 10 innings
The Nats’ closer has impressed all season, but he was burned for a solo homer with two outs in the ninth before Bryce Harper won it in the 10th with a sac fly.
washingtonpost.com
Trinity Rodman scores twice as Spirit storms back to top Angel City
Three goals in a seven-minute stretch power Washington to a 4-2 victory at Audi Field.
washingtonpost.com
Disneyland costumed character employees vote to unionize
The Disneyland Resort employees who play costumed characters in the parks, parades or hotels have voted to unionize, citing issues such as pay and working conditions.
latimes.com
‘Hacks’ Season 3 Is Its Horniest Yet. Does It Need This Much Sex?
Photo Illustration by Erin O'Flynn/The Daily Beast/MaxHaving a one-night stand seems to have become veteran comic Deborah Vance’s (Jean Smart) go-to method in confronting the two most painful moments from her past: losing a late-night talk show and losing her husband to her younger sister in one fell swoop.In both of the last two seasons of Hacks,
thedailybeast.com
This is the new top spot for migrants to slip across US border
”Migration is a dynamic phenomenon, and people are going to adjust and find the circumstances where they have the best chance to reach the United States.”
nypost.com
The Huge ‘Bridgerton’ Sex Scene Is Scored by…Pitbull?!
Photo Illustration by Luis G. Rendon/The Daily Beast/Netflix/Getty ImagesHave you ever professed feelings to the love of your life while a Pitbull song was playing in the background? Oh, you haven’t? You should give it a try sometime. Clearly, it works wonders—because in Bridgerton, it leads to one of the series’ greatest love stories. Pitbull is a
thedailybeast.com
Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami denies D.C. United on late strike by Leo Campana
Leo Campana had the winner in the fourth minute of second-half stoppage time as D.C. United fell, 1-0.
washingtonpost.com
Liberty bury Fever with barrage of 3-pointers in win
When the Liberty’s offense clicked last season, 3-pointers were at the crux of that success.
nypost.com
Bella Hadid’s Perfume Line Will Awaken Your Inner Romantic
Photo Illustration by Erin O'Flynn/The Daily Beast/Getty ImagesThere is something preternaturally alluring about Bella Hadid. Maybe it’s the supermodel-activist-lemon heiress’ cheekbones, which look like Rodin’s careful hands finished sculpting them just before Pat McGrath’s devoted brushes dotted highlighter powder across their curvature. Or perha
thedailybeast.com
NYCFC beat Red Bulls to pull even in Eastern Conference standings
Mounsef Bakrar's helped lift NYCFC to a 2-1 win on Saturday night and pulled them even in the Eastern Conference standings with the Red Bulls.
nypost.com
Chicago mom left waiting hours for help after 911 call for home invasion: ‘We have no units to send you’
The dispatcher also asked me if I would consider defending myself … if I had a weapon or considered getting one.”
nypost.com
Florida mom speaks out, asks for prayers after daughter detained in Turks and Caicos for carrying ammo
A Florida mom shared her heartbreak after her daughter was arrested and detained for carrying ammunition at an airport in the Turks and Caicos Islands.
foxnews.com
Seize the Grey wins the Preakness, ending Mystik Dan's Triple Crown bid
Seize the Grey ended Kentucky Derby winner Mystik Dan's Triple Crown bid by going wire to wire to win the Preakness, giving trainer D. Wayne Lukas his seventh victory in the race.
npr.org
Trump demands Biden 'drug test,' rips 'radical' RFK Jr. in bid to 'rebellious bunch' at NRA
Former President Trump fired up supporters at the National Rifle Association's Annual Meeting, demanding that President Biden get a drug test before the pair debates.
foxnews.com
Dive team finds bodies of 2 men dead inside plane found upside down in Alaska lake
Alaska State Troopers say dive teams found the two bodies.
abcnews.go.com
Man suspected of shooting infant son in hostage standoff apparently killed himself
He was found in the rubble of a Phoenix home that caught fire during a standoff.
abcnews.go.com
Sarah Hyland’s ex Matt Prokop arrested for allegedly assaulting girlfriend
In September 2014, the "Modern Family" actress filed for a temporary restraining order against Prokop after alleging he choked and threatened her.
nypost.com
Joe Biden faces potentially nightmarish June swoon with his re-election hopes fading
The month of June is shaping up to be a potential nightmare for President Biden with his re-election, his legacy and Hunter Biden’s freedom all on the line over the course of a month-long gantlet.
nypost.com
Trump Ends NRA Speech With ‘Horror’ Warning Set to Dramatic QAnon Music
Justin Sullivan/Getty ImagesDonald Trump followed up his endorsement by the National Rifle Association on Saturday with a speech stoking fears of the government under Joe Biden “coming for your guns” and a bizarre monologue set to dramatic music resembling a song favored by QAnon.Addressing thousands of members of the NRA at their annual meeting in
thedailybeast.com
Dali ship will be floated on Monday, officials say
Officials plan to move the ship to a Baltimore terminal at high tide.
washingtonpost.com
Maryland governor signs Biden-inspired bill establishing 'Center for Firearm Violence Prevention'
Democratic Maryland governor Wes Moore signed a law creating the Center for Firearm Violence Prevention and Intervention, modeled after President Biden's gun violence office.
foxnews.com
Oleksandr Usyk defeats Tyson Fury by split decision to become undisputed heavyweight champion
Oleksandr Usyk defeated Tyson Fury by split decision on Sunday to become the first undisputed heavyweight boxing champion in 24 years.
nypost.com
5-year-old boy struck and killed by SUV after playing in Queens playground
A 5-year-old boy was killed after he ran out into a Queens street and was struck by a vehicle, according to police. The child was hit around 6:06 pm in front of 20-19 124th St. in Flushing near a playground, cops said. The boy “ran into the roadway” when a 2008 Honda CRV traveling southbound...
nypost.com
Anchovies behind surge of sea lions in San Francisco
San Francisco's famed Fisherman's Wharf is seeing an unusually large number sea lions that local officials say is the largest herd of the sea mammals the area has seen in 15 years. The massive herd is snacking on an overabundance of anchovies. Kenny Choi explains.
cbsnews.com
Rudy Giuliani served indictment in Arizona fake elector case
The former New York mayor was served after his 80th birthday celebration as he was walking to the car, a political adviser said.
cbsnews.com
Six players within two shots of lead heading into final round of PGA Championship
Sunday’s final round of the PGA Championship will resemble a horse race, with so many big-name contender within two shots of the lead.
nypost.com
TikTok influencers file lawsuit against U.S. government
Eight TikTok influencers have filed a lawsuit against the U.S. government in an effort to block enactment of a law passed and signed last month that requires TikTok be sold by China-based owner Byte Dance by January, or face a possible nationwide ban. Scott MacFarlane has more.
cbsnews.com
Auto workers in Alabama vote against joining UAW
Workers at two Mercedes Benz plants in Alabama this week voted against joining the United Auto Workers union. The movement to unionize saw opposition, not just from the company, but also Republican Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey. Michael George has more.
cbsnews.com
Zac Brown granted temporary restraining order against estranged wife after suing her: report
Zac Brown was reportedly granted a temporary restraining order against his estranged wife Kelly Yazdi. The country star sued Yazdi over an Instagram post he said damaged his reputation.
foxnews.com
DeMatha’s Chase Lopez roars back as Stags secure WCAC track title
After falling just short of a championship in the 3,200, he claimed victories in the 800 and 1,600 as DeMatha took the team title.
washingtonpost.com
Fighting intensifies in northern Gaza; body of fourth hostage recovered
The violence across the devastated Palestinian territory is widening, with the northern Jabalia refugee camp seeing some of its fiercest fighting in months between Israeli forces and Hamas militants. The Israeli military said Saturday it has recovered the remains of a fourth hostage, this after the bodies of three hostages were recovered on Friday.
cbsnews.com
I have Alzheimer’s — I’m beating back the deadly disease with these simple lifestyle changes
Two brave fighters share their successes in a new documentary film.
nypost.com
Georgia college student killed by 'armed intruder' on campus: report
A student at Kennesaw State University in Georgia was killed Saturday by an “armed intruder" on campus, officials said, according to FOX 5 Atlanta.
foxnews.com
Carlos Correa floats novel idea to stop spate of missed calls by umpires
Carlos Correa has had it with the missed calls by MLB's umpires, and thinks this change should be considered.
nypost.com
New York priest says Pentecost is a reminder the Holy Spirit is 'alive and at work'
Pentecost Sunday, celebrated 50 days after Easter Sunday, remembers the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the apostles, said Fr. Louis Cona of Rockville Center, New York.
foxnews.com
Texas Gov. Gregg Abbott pledges to keep bussing migrants to NYC: ‘Mayor Adams needs something to do’
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott vowed Saturday to continue bussing migrants to New York City — and took a shot at Mayor Eric Adams during a speech to the NRA. “Unless and until Joe Biden does finally begin to enforce immigration laws I will continue to bus those migrants to sanctuary cities across the United States...
nypost.com
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, under fire for shooting dog, describes making 'hard decisions' at California GOP gathering
Once on former President Trump's shortlist of potential running mates, Kristi Noem also repeated allegations about cartels using Native lands that have resulted in tribes barring her from their property.
latimes.com
Demare Dezeurn beats loaded Masters Meet field for 100 win
The Bishop Alemany freshman wins the 100-meter dash in a wind-aided 10.36 seconds with a fast start during qualifying for the state track and field finals.
latimes.com
Seize the Grey wins the Preakness for D. Wayne Lukas and ends Mystik Dan’s Triple Crown bid
Seize the Grey win the Preakness Stakes for Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas.
abcnews.go.com
Nuggets vs. Timberwolves Game 7 prediction: NBA player props, picks, odds
This Nuggets-Timberwolves series has been all over the place. 
nypost.com
Trump Supporters Gather in the Bronx Ahead of Trump Visit
Supporters of former President Donald Trump gathered together in the Bronx on Saturday to show their support for the former president ahead of his upcoming visit to the city. The post Trump Supporters Gather in the Bronx Ahead of Trump Visit appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito Needs to Be Subpoenaed—Legal Analyst
Justice Alito said he had "no involvement whatsoever" in flying an upside-down American flag in his yard.
newsweek.com
Fantasy baseball: How owners should view Brent Rooker
Brent Rooker's hot stretch made him the most added player in ESPN leagues over the past week.
nypost.com
Primera taquería mexicana en conseguir una estrella Michelin
Aunque los representantes de Michelin se acercaron el miércoles al local para obsequiarle una de sus chaquetas blancas de chef de manga larga e inmaculadas, él no se la puso.
latimes.com
Seize the Day earns wire-to-wire Preakness Stakes win on muddy track
Hall of Fame trainer Wayne Lukas, 88, and jockey Jaime Torres, making his Triple Crown race debut, lead Seize the Day to Preakness Stakes win Saturday.
latimes.com