
DANIEL BROUSSARD
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DEAR SIR: UNLIKE MANY OTHER PEOPLE I enjoy possum visits
to my yard. Please advise me of foods they enjoy and anything I can do
to encourage them to stay. It would be very nice to have them."
The task of answering this letter,
addressed to the Resources Agency, fell to me. I responded carefully, for
here was another opportunity to help wildlife by passing on some vital
information to an interested person. I reassured the writer that opossums
are omnivorous, that they find the food they need on their own, and explained
why feeding them or any other wildlife is unwise, inhumane, and may be
dangerous. I pointed out that food put out for opossums would attract rats,
cats, dogs, and raccoons, as well as other scavengers. These night visitors
might stop by at other neighbors, who, not appreciating them, might call
animal control officers to have them trapped and relocated. I explained
that opossums are not native to California, and that in natural areas they
are detrimental to indigenous wildlife. I listed several other reasons
for not feeding the opossums and concluded: "I hope this information
will help you in living with, and enjoying, the wild animals in your area."
After some weeks another letter
arrived: "Thank you for your most helpful, informative letter. . .
. My little cluster of opossums is semi-civilized, I'm afraid, with housing
all about this area, and I'm electing to feed them. We took their space
and they don't have many sources of food. After six months of feeding--dried
cat food, avocados, eggs, and grapes--no adverse effects. . . . I'll keep
feeding, as they have no other places to go unless we provide train/bus
tickets."
Once again my arguments had failed.
This correspondent was one of many well-meaning but ill-informed people
who treat wild animals as though they were pets. They feed them because
they want to help them, in a vague, sentimental way, not realizing that
their help is not needed--in this form. Or they do it because the animals
are charming, they want to see them up close, they want to have a picture
of themselves with a wild animal. Yet by offering food to birds, deer,
raccoons, and other creatures living at large, these people unintentionally
cause serious harm to the animals they feed, to other animals, and sometimes
to humans. In my 26 years as a wildlife biologist with the Department of
Fish and Game I have seen the problems associated with feeding grow and
multiply.
Take deer. People who feed deer
that come near a campground often have no idea what deer eat. What they
see is deer picking up things around the campground, and that's the wrong
food. If these animals regularly feed on junk food, the microorganisms
in their digestive tracts can't keep adjusting; they cannot process the
food. Deer also have trouble discriminating between junk food and the packaging
it comes in. Many have died from stomachs filled with candy wrappers and
all kinds of garbage that they associate with something to be ingested.
Then there is the matter of disease.
Skunks are major carriers of rabies, deer carry the ticks that spread Lyme
disease. When animals cluster at campgrounds or homes in abnormally high
numbers expecting food, the chances of disease transmittal rise sharply.
There is much evidence of this, but the people who are attracting the animals
are unaware. They usually do not see animals sick and painfully dying of
distemper, mange, parasitic worms, or the vast array of other communicable
diseases and parasites that afflict wildlife.


Can deer be dangerous? Yes. People who think campground deer are tame
may find that they can attack suddenly. A woman trying to feed apple slices
to a deer was hospitalized after a buck tossed her into the air on his
antlers, breaking her tailbone. I have heard of someone trying to put a
child on the back of an elk, thinking that wildlife in parks must be tame.
Attracting deer also may attract
animals that prey on deer. A wildlife officer was called to a home in the
Sierra foothills where a mountain lion had been seen several times. He
learned that the residents had put a salt lick on their porch. Placing
salt blocks out for deer is illegal under the 1996 state regulation prohibiting
big game feeding (Title 14, California Code of Regulations, Sec. 251.3).
The mountain lion's main food is deer. By routinely bringing in deer, you
may attract mountain lions.
The key point in all this is that
animals that become habituated to human feeding change their behavior.
In Los Angeles recently, a child in Griffith Park was severely bitten by
one of a number of coyotes that had become accustomed to being fed and
had acquired the dangerous habit of coming too close to people. Years before
in Los Angeles, another child was dragged from her yard and killed by a
coyote emboldened by feeding. A child might mistake a coyote for a dog
and move in to pet it. In some situations a coyote might mistake a small
human child for a prey animal, though coyotes do not normally attack humans.
"Bear problems" have increased
as more people have moved into bear habitat. Often, people feed bears inadvertently
by failing to close garbage can lids securely, or worse, give them handouts.
Sometimes such bears must be killed, simply because people who live in
or near bear habitat do not recognize their responsibility to make sure
they don't attract bears in the first place.
Each time a human being is injured
by a wild animal there is an outcry, with people demanding that these animals
be eradicated. When fed animals become a nuisance, the feeders, or their
neighbors, often want someone to relocate the animal in a humane way. This
is an unwise and often unauthorized remedy that doesn't solve the real
problem, but instead creates new ones--it moves the problem to a different
location and puts relocated animals at additional risk in unfamiliar areas.
Yet we could easily share our environment with some wild animals if we'd
only learn to respect their independence and their wildness.


Must we give up all encounters with wild animals, then? Not at all.
The best way to see them and hear them is to walk away from the campground,
to walk into a wilderness and just look and listen. (See Hiking
by Ear, Listening on Foot for more on listening.) Some people are afraid
to do that. They can do it from their cars, sitting quietly, windows open.
The car will serve as a blind.
The impulse to offer food is natural.
It's called hospitality when we offer it to our own species. It gives us
pleasure. But let's not inadvertently kill wildlife with kindness. If we
truly care about wild animals we will learn more about them, make sure
they have the habitat they need, respect their self-reliance, and spare
them our charity.
Ron Jurek is a wildlife biologist in the Nongame Bird and Mammal
Conservation Program of the California Department of Fish and Game. He
works with the California condor and other endangered and threatened species.
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