Costa Mesa is more a roadrunner kind of town
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I was so glad to read that the Costa Mesa Animal Control Department
is now logging reports of coyote. I also hope records of activities
and attacks will be kept.
I am a Mesa Verde resident whose cat has disappeared. When our pet
of 14 years did not come home on June 6, I called Animal Control to
get some information and some help locating him. After several
conversations, I learned a lot about coyotes, limited budgets and
public servants’ priorities.
It was at this time that Sally Humphrey and I teamed up to create,
print and distribute our own information flier at our own cost. Thank
you to the many shop owners who allowed our flier to be posted and
all the others that helped spread the word.
I am pleased to know there is now a process and procedure to
gather information. This way, when there is a hot spot of activity,
the department representatives can approach the city with hard
evidence and request extra manpower to patrol, code enforcement
officers to enforce trash policies and overgrown vegetation and funds
for educational materials.
ESTELLE SEWELL HUGHES
Costa Mesa
With regard to humans and wildlife -- or more specifically, urban
and wild -- interaction, as reported the articles regarding the high
alert for coyotes, the most important ethical question to ask is:
Which party is encroaching on which? Are humans encroaching on the
coyote’s fair claim to territory, or is the coyote encroaching
unfairly upon human settlements? The increased incidences of urban
coyote sightings (and yes, in Mesa del Mar we have seen more this
season than in the previous five years) has everything to do with
human development.
When coyotes enter residential neighborhoods, they are looking for
food: There is nothing malicious about their actions. As long as we
humans provide food in the form of cats, dogs, pet food and garbage,
the coyotes will keep coming. In Mesa del Mar, coyotes are entering
the neighborhood via storm drainage channels by climbing over short
fences and moving through backyards along St. Claire and Drake
streets. Coyotes have been documented climbing 5 1/2- to 6-foot
fences; so one part of the solution, not mentioned in the Pilot
article, is to create a physical barrier of at least 6 1/2 feet.
It is also important to note that coyotes control meso-predators,
such as raccoons, skunks and opossums, so when we kill coyotes, we
risk tripling the balance of nature. These meso-predators can carry
rabies and may harbor life-threatening parasites, and their numbers
can climb drastically in the face of depredation.
However, I don’t blame our animal control officers: they are
legally prevented from relocating coyotes.
As for killing coyotes because it was utilizing someone’s backyard
for sleeping, I believe it would be better to simply scare the coyote
off and let it get back to balancing nature the only way it knows.
So, the next time you see a coyote, don’t call Animal Control,
whose options for dealing with this issue are severely limited.
Simply follow the rudimentary rules of coyote prevention as outlined
in the article, such as keeping pets and their food indoors, garbage
tightly secured, clear brush away from homes to remove hiding places
and keep constant vigilance over your young children.
Theoretically, if we limit the coyote’s food source in urban
areas, they will be required to search for prey in the transition
areas between wild and urban habitats. This should give us renewed
impetus to preserve the small amount of undeveloped land that, for
the moment, still exists.
JAY B. LITVAK
Costa Mesa
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