UDAF
Uses 21st Century Equipment to Track Offending Predators
The following
report was originally written in 1996 to spotlight the advances made in
predator control in Utah. The Wildlife Services Specialist who was featured
in the article, Shane Cornwall, died January 14, 1998 in a helicopter
crash.
Shane Cornwall strains
to hear the faint beeps through the hissing static of his radio receiver.
In one hand Cornwall holds an antenna. In the other hand he cradles an
electronic receiver that is picking up faint pulses from a transmitter
at an animal snare five miles away. The signal tells him a cougar foot
snare has been sprung, and that it might have caught the cougar that attacked
a flock of sheep grazing in Utah's west desert. The cat killed at least
one ewe and the flock's owner worries it will return for more.
Sheep rancher Steve
Fitzgerald lost 150 sheep to predators like cougars and coyotes last year.
Some years the loss is twice that amount, with the monetary damage estimated
at $10,000.
Cornwall is a trapper
with the Utah Department of Agriculture's Animal Damage Control (ADC)
program. He uses 20th century technology to turn a centuries old job into
one that's more humane for both predator and prey.
Cornwall's new equipment
allows him to electronically monitor eight foot-snares from a distance
of up to 30 miles. The device tells him in an instant whether a snare
has been sprung, allowing Cornwall to immediately drive to the site to
investigate. If Cornwall finds an animal that hasn't been targeted for
taking, he releases it. The electronic monitor saves Cornwall considerable
time, and makes his job a little safer. Some of the snares are placed
in remote areas with few roads or places to call for help.
The ride to the cougar
snare is quick, up a rocky four-wheel-drive road to a ravine not far from
where a dead sheep was recently discovered. With rifle in hand, Cornwall
moves toward the snare.
"It's a false alarm."
Cornwall says. A recent rain had weighted down some sage brush branches,
which falsely triggered a device on the transmitter indicating that the
snare had been sprung (see story below on how transmitter and receiver
work).
Cornwall dismantles
the snare after testing it. It had been in place and regularly checked
for nearly two weeks. According to ADC policy, traps can only be set for
a certain length of time following a confirmed kill. This cougar had moved
on, or was more patient than the trappers.
Utah's ADC program
was created in 1931 to protect livestock, poultry and crop-raising industries
from damaging predatory animals. Turkey growers, as well as cattle and
sheep ranchers, are charged a fee to help pay for the program. The state
of Utah matches the funds generated by the ranchers' fees. The federal
government also contributes to the program.
"It doesn't take
long for a rancher to go out of business if you lose too many sheep to
coyotes," Fitzgerald says. "If it weren't for trappers like Shane, we
wouldn't be able to graze here."
Fitzgerald refers
to the Death Canyon B.L.M. grazing allotment in Juab county. It's the
same land where the Fitzgeralds have grazed cattle and sheep for four
generations.
Inside Fitzgerald's
portable camp, which is little more than a bed and gas cook range on wheels,
his son Cory stokes the fire in the wood stove. In the warmth of the camp,
and speaking between sips of cowboy coffee, Fitzgerald talks about the
challenges of ranching.
"One year a bear
came through the herd and killed 30 sheep in one night. It didn't eat
the sheep, it just killed to kill." He says the trappers and the ADC program
help keep him in business. He doesn't mind paying for the service, because
he knows the trappers are taking animals that would be killing his sheep.
"This is all I know.
My father ran sheep, his father ran sheep, and if my boy can still make
a profit at it when I quit, Cory will run sheep too."
In addition to the
eight electronic devices, Cornwall checks 96 other traps primarily set
for coyotes. Cornwall says some days he may catch several coyotes.
Since the ADC program
began many years ago, trappers have taken predators in all 29 Utah counties.
It has saved livestock and turkey owners millions of dollars. That revenue
allows producers to reinvest in their businesses and helps make Utah livestock
and wildlife interests powerful economic forces in the state.
The program also
helps protect dairy farms and other agricultural interests from nuisance
animals such as raccoons, skunks and certain blackbirds.
How The Monitor
Works
The transmitter and receiver
work together to tell trappers whether a snare or trap has been set off.
A wire is attached to the snare or trap. When the snare is sprung, the wire
activates the transmitter, which then sends out a distinct signal. Trappers
use the receiver to listen for that signal. Receivers can detect a signal
from a distance of 30 miles.
Utah law requires
that ADC traps or snares be checked every 48 to 96 hours. The electronic
monitors help make trapping in Utah more humane. The electronics behind
the program were developed by the ADC's Wildlife Research Center in Denver,
Colorado.
The ADC program in
Utah is administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and is a cooperative
program with the Utah Department of Agriculture.
Posted
January 16, 1998