Bob_Skurka
Super Member
- Joined
- Jul 1, 2003
- Messages
- 7,615
I've got to suggest that sometimes human interfearance causes the problems that we now have to deal with. Regardless of human sprawl out to the suburbs and beyond, and regardless of if we like superfarms, or any of the other things, here we are with a problem.
So how do we deal with a problem that 10,000 homes and 3 or 4 decades handed us? And how do we deal with the fact that we humans, over the past 10 decades, have often culled the predators out of the food chain that would have controlled the coyotes? Where I live the coyote is currently the top of the food chain save for man. We historically had bears and wolves here, but those have been gone for 100 years. So now it is humans and coyotes. And while neither they, nor I, are solely responsible for the problem, they and I have to resolve it. So given the choice, I have to side with protecting the human family.
If the pack is too large, it must be culled back. I'd prefer that it magically happen, or that nature resolve it, but often it falls to humans to 'fix' things. Its not much different than the deer herds that are at record sizes in many areas, the wolves or coyotes feast, in their absense the deer overpopulate and starve and/or they traffic gets them. But one way or another, the deer must go.
We screwed with nature, now we are stuck with problems. We sometimes have to screw around some more with nature to get things into some sort of pseudo balance.
So how do we deal with a problem that 10,000 homes and 3 or 4 decades handed us? And how do we deal with the fact that we humans, over the past 10 decades, have often culled the predators out of the food chain that would have controlled the coyotes? Where I live the coyote is currently the top of the food chain save for man. We historically had bears and wolves here, but those have been gone for 100 years. So now it is humans and coyotes. And while neither they, nor I, are solely responsible for the problem, they and I have to resolve it. So given the choice, I have to side with protecting the human family.
If the pack is too large, it must be culled back. I'd prefer that it magically happen, or that nature resolve it, but often it falls to humans to 'fix' things. Its not much different than the deer herds that are at record sizes in many areas, the wolves or coyotes feast, in their absense the deer overpopulate and starve and/or they traffic gets them. But one way or another, the deer must go.
We screwed with nature, now we are stuck with problems. We sometimes have to screw around some more with nature to get things into some sort of pseudo balance.
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