Photo by Vince Fedoroff
ON THE PROWL – This coyote is seen Sunday by the dog parking lot of the Whitehorse cross-country ski trails. A child was bitten by a coyote Saturday at the Canada Games Centre. That coyote then had to be shot.
Photo by Vince Fedoroff
ON THE PROWL – This coyote is seen Sunday by the dog parking lot of the Whitehorse cross-country ski trails. A child was bitten by a coyote Saturday at the Canada Games Centre. That coyote then had to be shot.
A child bitten Saturday afternoon by a coyote outside the Canada Games Centre is fine but the animal had to be shot after displaying aggressive behaviour.
A child bitten Saturday afternoon by a coyote outside the Canada Games Centre is fine but the animal had to be shot after displaying aggressive behaviour.
Kris Gustafson of Environment Yukon said today the animal was shot in the parking lot.
The carcass was scheduled to be examined this afternoon to determine if there is anything that contributed to the animal's unusual behaviour.
Whitehorse General Hospital spokesman Val Pike said the seven-year-old girl was bitten on the buttocks, but the skin was not broken, though there was some bruising.
Without the skin being punctured, and with virtually no substantial evidence of rabies existing in the southern Yukon in recent memory, Environment Yukon veterinarian Mary VanderKop said it's extremely unlikely the girl was infected.
She said it's also highly unlikely the coyote was even carrying rabies.
Shortly after 1 p.m. Saturday, Gustafson said, conservation officers and the RCMP were notified of an aggressive coyote hanging around the Games Centre.
A young girl was leaving the centre with her mother and was walking on the grassy area near the front entrance when she was bitten from behind, he said.
Gustason said a person chased the animal across Hamilton Boulevard into the wooded area near Valleyview. The coyote eventually returned and began bothering patrons near the front entrance and hiding in the nearby bushes.
Only after officers were called at 1:17 p.m. and the coyote was killed was it determined through conducting interviews there had been another incident earlier, he said.
A group of three young teenagers, Gustafson explained, had been confronted by a coyote in the vacant lot down the hill from the centre shortly before the girl was bitten.
He said the three were playing around near the piles of gravel where the new ambulance station is scheduled for construction.
"The coyote approached one of the kids,” he said. "He reached out and pet the coyote because he thought is was a dog, and it backed up and began bearing its teeth and circling all three kids.”
Gustafson said the kids scared off the animal but as they hastened up the bike path to the Games Centre, the coyote followed.
"We believe it was the same animal that bit the girl.”
Incidents of this sort are rare, and the senior conservation officer can only remember five in the last 30 years in the Yukon.
He recalls the time several years ago that he was forced to shoot a coyote on the steps at F.H. Collins Secondary School.
A subsequent examination of the stomach contents indicated the animal had been eating, and was likely being fed, human food, Gustafson said.
He said it's probable the animals start associating humans with food.
"That is why we always stress, ‘Do not feed the animals. Do not feed the coyotes, or the bears, or the foxes....'
"Feeding the birds is OK,” he said.
The veterinarian said once animals become habituated to humans for one reason or the other, predators like coyotes can become desensitized or something less fearless, and begin to relate humans to a source of food, particularly small kids.
"Do not feed the animals,” she emphasized. "People do not seem to realize they end up dead.”
VanderKop said she was waiting to hear back the Yukon's branch of environmental health to see if it wants samples of the coyote sent to test for rabies on an urgent basis.
Samples will be sent out by Environment Yukon as a matter of routine even if it's not deemed to be a priority case.
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Comments (8)
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flyingfur on Jun 1, 2012 at 11:31 am
Gravedigga: So short answer is, except for the sarcasm and passive-aggressiveness, you have nothing to contribute to the topic at hand. That's what I figured.
Anyway, hopefully we're all a little more careful with our trash because of this but I doubt this was a case of the coyote getting this out of the trash as opposed to being fed. If it was trash there would likely be more in it's digestive tract other than one solitary hard-boiled egg.
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Tha Gravedigga on Jun 1, 2012 at 5:59 am
Frankly flyingfur ... I did actually try and explain what I believed was a simple misunderstanding between two highly respected and well liked members or our humble community. Your first comment was meant to show what happens when people feed wild creatures and the consequences that ensue.
And pardon me for any mistakes in regards to the terms of use. I just had NO IDEA! Please can you let this one slide? Pretty please!!
And I said nothing about readers, don't lump everyone who reads these articles with a bunch who hide behind a screen name like us. Cheers
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flyingfur on May 31, 2012 at 3:37 am
Gravedigga: Did you have something to add to the discussion or just a non-related criticism of other readers/posters? Frnakly that kind of trolling and pointless comment is not what these forums are for and likely contrary to the terms of use.
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the problem is people on May 31, 2012 at 1:39 am
Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again expecting a different result each time.
Please DO NOT toy with wildlife.
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Tha Gravedigga on May 30, 2012 at 3:05 pm
You both seem two of the busiest people on the commenting side of this site and the quickest to make sure your voices are heard. Pretty sure she just misunderstood what flyingfur meant....
Could be the kinda thing that makes you wonder why you're posting so much on a local news site and where will you go from here...
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flyingfur on May 30, 2012 at 8:20 am
Jackie: Really? Feeding wildlife has them associate humans with food and the more of that association they get the more comfortable and fearless they become of people until, like in this case, somebody gets bitten and the Conservation Officers (no...I am not one) get called in to do our dirty work for us. This was not the animals fault but the fault of whomever fed it boiled eggs etc. Additionally, relocate it to where? Any idea what the survival rate of relocated animals is? Your idea is to dart the parents and the pups and move the whole family where? I agree the animals don't deserve this but you need to do your homework before you attack my comment without a plausible solution of your own.
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Jackie Ward on May 29, 2012 at 9:01 am
You must be a conservation officer. Feeding wildlife doesn't kill them. Relocating problem animals is the right and humane thing to do. Animals don't deserve a death sentence for being "wild" animals. Your comment above makes me sick.
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flyingfur on May 28, 2012 at 12:09 pm
For those folks who think it's a wonderful experience to feed and get close to wildlife; might be a great experience for you but you kill the wildlife by doing this and in this case, if the coyote pictured was in fact one of the coyotes involved, your actions were also a death sentence to her pups (the female pictured has recently been nursing).