The Indefensible Violence of Wildlife Killing Contests
Wildlife Killing Contests isas intendedextremely difficult to watch. The recently released twenty-five-minute documentary, produced by Filipe DeAndrade and Brian Moghari in partnership with Project Coyote, contains graphic footage of animals being callously slain for entertainment and prize money, only to be added to piles of carcasses used for vain photo opportunities. As gruesome and stomach-turning as this footage is, the most sickening part is the simple fact that wildlife killing contests remain legal in over forty states, including across public lands.
Wildlife killing contests are prize-driven competitions to see who can kill the most target animalssuch as bobcat, wolves, foxes, pumas, and, most of all, coyotesin a given period of time. Offering the perspective from hunters, historians, activists, policymakers, and ranchers, this film makes clear that these brutal events targeting native wildlife constitute an unethical bloodsport, often motivated by prize money, with no scientific basis in ecosystem management.
Debunked and specious claims of predator management promoted by contest organizers and participants are convenient justifications for these killing contests that hold no scientific merit. Peer-reviewed studies have demonstrated that not only do these contests serve no legitimate ecosystem management purpose, they can actually exacerbate livestock depredation and human-wildlife conflict.
https://www.counterpunch.org/2021/04/16/the-indefensible-violence-of-wildlife-killing-contests/