Lurediver

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Conservationists kill wild pigs to save fox
More than 150 years of ecological chaos brought the Santa Cruz Island fox to the brink of extinction due to the existence of feral hogs, golden eagles
By Gillian Flaccus
Associated Press

The number of Santa Cruz Island foxes, found only on the Channel Islands, has dropped to about 1,650 from about 6,000 six years ago .
SANTA CRUZ ISLAND, Calif. — Norm Macdonald rises each morning with the sun, grabs his .223-caliber rifle and slips into the passenger seat of a tiny, doorless helicopter for another day of shooting pigs.
As the chopper skims over rugged terrain, Macdonald scans dozens of simple fence traps he's set up for the thousands of wild swine that have overrun this Southern California island.
When there are pigs in the traps — and there always are — Macdonald leans out and pumps two bullets into each animal: One for the heart and one for the head.
Each pig's death brings conservationists one step closer to their goal of saving the tiny Santa Cruz fox, an endangered species found only on this 96-square-mile island off Santa Barbara. Experts believe it's the best way to mend the island's delicate ecological web, which was torn when domesticated pigs escaped from now-abandoned ranches as early as the 1850s.
The killings have angered animal rights groups and forced the National Park Service and The Nature Conservancy, which co-own the island, to explain why groups dedicated to protecting animals are instead paying $5 million to kill them.
"It's not just about killing pigs, it's about saving a native species," says Lotus Vermeer, the conservancy's project director for Santa Cruz Island. "What we're choosing to do here is save biodiversity."
Macdonald and his eight-man hunting team from the New Zealand-based Prohunt Inc. have started fast — killing in the past two weeks more than 800 of the island's estimated 3,000 pigs. They expect the entire process to take more than two years, eventually incorporating trained dogs, infrared sensing devices and radio trackers.
More than 150 years of ecological chaos brought Macdonald here — and if biologists are right, the island's future depends on his success.
Nick Morones and several classmates from Avalon Elementary School look on as they release a Santa Catalina Island fox pup from its cage with the help of veterinarian Winston Vickers.
"I think it's going to take a couple of years at the end to make sure we got them all. The first 90 percent goes really quickly," Macdonald says.
In 1853, the first ranch pigs broke into the wild and, within a few years, their population swelled to hundreds. Voracious scavengers, the pigs dug into hillsides as they foraged for bulbs and grubs, and snuffed for acorns under majestic oaks, tearing up the roots.
That triggered erosion, destroyed Chumash Indian archaeological sites that are at least 8,000 years old and encouraged the growth of nonnative plants that choked out scrubby oaks and grasses. Fennel, an invasive species, now grows so prolifically that on a hot day the air carries the plant's licorice scent.
The National Park Service has in the past eradicated nonnative sheep, rats, rabbits and mules on other of the Channel Islands.
In the early 1990s, the fox began to disappear from Santa Cruz Island at an alarming rate.
Biologists concluded that golden eagles, attracted by the easy prey of piglets, had colonized the island — and also were feasting on fox. For years, the dominant and fish-eating bald eagles had kept the golden eagles away, but they were wiped out by DDT dumped off the coast beginning in 1947.
The fox population plummeted more than 90 percent, from more than 1,000 to fewer than 100 animals today. Last year, the federal government listed the fox as an endangered species.
A Santa Catalina Island fox pup dashes into the wilderness after being released on Santa Catalina Island, Calif. The Catalina Island Conservancy released 10 captive-bred pups from one breeding season in an effort to reestablish the subspecies.
The public park service and the private Nature Conservancy believe that only aggressive human intervention will save the fox.
Eradicating the pigs, their logic goes, will force golden eagles to search elsewhere for food, letting the fragile fox population rebound. To help that process along, biologists have relocated 29 golden eagles to the Sierra Nevada and also introduced 34 bald eagle chicks and bred 34 fox pups on the island.
Russell Galipeau, superintendent of the Channel Islands National Park, acknowledges that killing one species to save another puts his agency in an awkward position. The pig eradication, he says, fits his agency's mission of restoring the island to its natural state while saving native species and protecting archaeological sites.
Federal and state law prohibits relocating the pigs, which may have pseudorabies and cholera, to the mainland. For the same reason, the carcasses of the dead pigs will be left on the island to rot. Sterilization and contraception aren't practical because the plan would fail if biologists miss only a few pigs — the fast-breeding pigs can rebound from a 70 percent population reduction in just one year, according to Galipeau.
"I'm trying to protect the natural system — not what humans handed us, but what nature handed us," he says. "Sometimes you have to do the same amount of disruption that damaged a place in order to restore it."
Critics have argued that, after so long on the island, the pigs belong as much as the foxes.
One group, the Channel Islands Animal Protection Association, was formed in the mid-1990s after the National Park Service poisoned nonnative rats that were damaging vegetation on nearby on Anacapa Island.
In the current case, the association believes the golden eagles were attracted not by pigs but by the rotting carcasses of feral sheep from an earlier eradication program in the 1980s. They believe the golden eagles discovered the 4-pound foxes — not the pigs — and stayed.
"Not only was this story made up, but the pigs are now an established member of the ecosystem," says association spokeswoman Scarlet Newton. "The public is being totally deceived."
Vermeer says those claims are unfounded. "We have an immediate need on Santa Cruz Island," she says. "It's a small price to pay for preserving an island's unique ecosystem."
 

robertanderson-1

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What a F&&&### joke!
The nature cons. tried this in the 80's
they managed to kill all the sheep i believe,
by shooting them from the air and atv's
once they went to the meadows to eat in the
morning and evening and staked out water holes
midday. they shot 90 percent of the pigs back then too!

like the new guy said the first 90 percent of the pigs are easy!

Now hike down into big and little(which is not so little)
Cardiac canyons and get into every nook and cranny
along the bottom and have guys up on the sides and on
top and in the air and shoot everyone of them.

whoops!! you guys could not find two of them!
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a male and a female, 2 years from now pigs all
over the bottom of these god forsaken, steep canyons
2 years from then pigs everywhere (yeah!)
I have bowhunted this Island 3 times back in the 80's
and really had a great time!
I took sheep each time
and the stench of pigs in those canyon bottoms was unreal!

to all that are trying to rid the Island of the pigs,so a fox can have
the Island all to itself i say
For Centuries they have been getting along.
open hunting back up to control the pig population
I can tell you now in full confidence that your heli-hunters will never
eraticate that Island of Pigs!
You have to go where they are
and most of the these so called "hunters" are not physically
capable of getting down in there let alone of getting back out.

You have wasted Our tax dollars in the 80's and 90's
and taken away my chance to ever hunt that beautiful island
again

lotsaluck to ya know it all's
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At least put in your contract to these "hunters" payment
clauses that exclude 75 percent of payment for 10 years
and do the research to prove no pigs exist on the island
before you waste anymore of my money!


sorry JHO'ers just my rant!
 

sdbowyer

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I have to agree with much of that Robert. I would have loved a chance to hunt pigs on the island. Only a very few elite biologists will ever see or enjoy the island fox and they can pat themselves on the back over it.
 

hatchet

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this also makes me f#%&*#@ sick ! i to hunted the island back in the late 80,S
what a big f,ing mistake this whole "eradication "process is!!!
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P.S. WHERE DUE I SIGN UP FOR A FOX TAG WHEN THEY BECOME A PROBLEM BECAUSE THEY ARE EATING TO MANY KANGAROO RATS AND RED LEGGED FROGS
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Shot

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I would love it when all (or most) of the pigs are gone from the island..............then the golden eagle can start eating the damn foxes instead of the pigs.

Looks like the have a good plan
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Marty

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Suit Seeks To Stop Killing Of Pigs To Save Foxes

May 19, 2005

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. -- A Santa Barbara man sued the federal government and an environmental group Wednesday for approving the killing of thousands of pigs on Santa Cruz Island as part of an effort to save the endangered foxes that also live there.

Richard M. Feldman claims island co-owners the National Park Service and The Nature Conservancy failed to submit a revised environmental impact report before commencing the eradication project.

"Having no natural defenses and having lived peacefully on the island for now 155 years, the Santa Cruz Island pigs are simply running for their lives and deserve nothing but to be left alone," according to the lawsuit, which seeks a permanent injunction against the project.

A phone call to a representative for The Nature Conservancy late Wednesday seeking comment was not immediately returned.

Proponents say the plan to kill an estimated 3,000 pigs would help save the tiny Santa Cruz fox, an endangered species found only on the 96-square-mile island off the Santa Barbara coast.The pigs came to the island during the 19th century as ranch animals. The ranches have long since been abandoned.

The fox began to disappear at an alarming rate in the early 1990s. It was listed as an endangered species last year when its population dropped more than 90 percent, to fewer than 100.

Prohunt Inc., which is based in New Zealand, is being paid $5 million to eradicate the pigs. The effort is expected to take more than two years.

Experts say eliminating the pigs will save the fox by forcing golden eagles to search elsewhere for food. The golden eagles have been feasting on foxes and piglets.

Feldman, who is acting as his own attorney, said that logic makes no sense.
 

Traveler

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The bowhunts on Santa Cruz were awesome, some of my fondest memories. It made me sick when the killed the sheep, now I am sick they are pi$$ing more of my tax $ away to ensure I will never get to hunt their. PS the foxes are inbred idiots.

Also the foxes fed on sheep pig carcasses? They would sit there and wait for you finish boning out your sheep or pig. They would start nibbling as soon as you turned your back.

Dan
 

Stryder

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I was able to hunt there the week before they shut it down for good in '97. It was mind blowing the amount of sheep I saw in 3 days of hunting. It still makes me heart sick when I think about it. I feel sorry for those who never were able to hunt there because it was definately a one of a kind hunt.
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PIGIG

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When I hunted there the sheep were everywhere and pigs to boot the foxes were right behind you waiting for the kill to be able to clean up the mess (gut pile) if there was 1 % of any common since in these people the 160,000 dollars received from charging every hunter 200.00 to hunt pigs would give them a little foresight in what could be done. If they used there heads! But these people do not have any sense they just make six figure incomes off of us the tax payer and think up these screwed up ideas. We should make a season out of all of these people and see just how fast they get a clue
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