Eric Shackle's Column
By
Eric Shackle
Prairie dogs: Pest or pets?
Prairie dogs, those cute little animals that sit up
on their hind legs like kangaroos and meerkats, are multiplying to plague level
in some US western states, in the same way that rabbits and mice have in
Australia from time to time. Despite their lovable looks, prairie dogs are not
related to domestic dogs. In fact, they're rodents, like rats, mice, hamsters,
gerbils and guinea pigs.
Farmers (ranchers) and private landowners say the
creatures can reduce crops, lower land values and create hazards for horses and
other animals that may step into their holes. Again, just like our rabbits.
Last month, the Colorado Wildlife Commission
decided that farmers and others would be allowed to pump a propane mixture into
the animals' burrows, then ignite the gas to cause an explosion. Division of
Wildlife spokesman Joe Lewandowski said land owners now had a new option, in
addition to shooting them, sucking them out of the ground with a vacuum,
poisoning or drowning them.
"I've got prairie dogs so thick I can't see
straight," said. Sterling farmer Matt Fickes. "They're born
pregnant... The prairie dog is a rat with a shovel." He said he had shot
about 20 of the animals a week on his 60 acre property, after trying to poison
them, and might try the new method.
Understandably, animal lovers were horrified. Judy
Enderle of the Prairie Preservation Alliance, said "It's disgusting. It's
very depressing that they would go to this length just to have another way to
wage war on wildlife."
In Colorado, prairie dogs now occupy more
than 10 times as much land in the Pawnee National Grassland as they did six
years ago.
The Humane Society of the United States said the
city of Fort Collins should stop killing prairie dogs in its natural areas. A
researcher urged the council to abandon plans to fumigate prairie dogs, and
instead transfer surplus animals to a natural area near the Colorado/Wyoming
border.
In New Mexico, an estimated 1500 prairie
dogs plague Albuquerque International Airport. "We've trapped and relocated
about 410 this year," said spokesman Daniel Jironhe. Santa Fe municipal
airport has a similar problem.
In Kansas, the Federal government is
thinking of using ferrets to reduce the increasing number of prairie dogs in
Logan County, where County Clerk Pat Schippers reported that prairie dogs had
multiplied so much this year that the animals were out of control. The Wildlife
Commission was concerned that introduction of ferrets would hurt current
attempts to control prairie dogs with chemicals.
And in Utah, golfers complained that prairie
dogs' burrows were spoiling their course, and plans were made to relocate the
animals. An environmental group opposed the idea, and the project came to a
standstill. The director of the Forest Guardians endangered species program,
Nicole Rosmarino, said the plan was unnecessary, and would lead to the animals
becoming extinct.
Someone who lives near the golf course commented:
"I regard golfers as a bigger pest than prairie dogs, and a bigger threat
to the environment. Between 60 and 70 per cent of Utah's urban water consumption
goes to watering lawns and golf courses, in the state with the second highest
per capita water consumption."
Animal lovers would enjoy visiting Don Getty's
wildlife and nature gallery. Just click HERE.
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