There's a great book by Dan Flores called "Coyote America" that talks about how resilient these creatures are. They have generational knowledge, like mothers show the cubs what traps and poison look like. When the population is under pressure the number of litters goes up and the cub mortality rate goes down.
You have a similar problem with dingoes in Australia the more the more the more they scavenge your rubbish, the more likely they are to bite someone. People really need to realise that wild animals have their own agendas, and we should probably leave them alone.
There's a great book by Dan Flores called "Coyote America" that talks about how resilient these creatures are. They have generational knowledge, like mothers show the cubs what traps and poison look like. When the population is under pressure the number of litters goes up and the cub mortality rate goes down.
You have a similar problem with dingoes in Australia the more the more the more they scavenge your rubbish, the more likely they are to bite someone. People really need to realise that wild animals have their own agendas, and we should probably leave them alone.