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In 1931, the Animal Damage Control Act was passed by Congress, authorizing the Federal Government to conduct wildlife damage control activities. The Act states, "The Secretary of Agriculture is hereby authorized to promulgate the best methods of eradication, suppression, or bringing under control on...areas of public domain or private lands, of wolves, lions, coyotes, bobcats, prairie dogs,...injurious to agriculture and animal husbandry, for the protection of stock and other domestic animals...and to conduct campaigns for the destruction or control of such animals."

Photo: Dick Randell

In 1963, a scathing report (the Leopold Report) was published following a review of the A.D.C. program. Despite the stark criticism of A.D.C. and the report's emphasis on shifting from lethal to non-lethal A.D.C. methods, little was done with the findings of this report and today's Animal Damage Control program differs very little in its attitude toward and impact on native wildlife. Since its inception several decades ago, A.D.C. has been transferred back and forth within Divisions, Departments, etc. of the Federal Government but now resides within the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS).

A.D.C and its predecessor programs have been responsible for the demise of all nineteen of the large mammals in the West, including grizzly bears, black bears, grey, red, swift and kit foxes, grey wolves, mountain lions, bobcats, lynx, jaguars, moose, elk, pronghorns, bighorn sheep, mule deer, whitetail deer, buffalo and coyotes. Many of the small mammal populations have also been decimated, particularly prairie dogs and the black-footed ferret.

Photo: Dick Randell
What was once an immense and diverse natural wilderness with native wildlife numbering in the several millions, the West is now an overmanaged, overgrazed, arid "wasteland", virtually devoid of all the larger mammals and smaller wildlife which made the West such a rich and diverse ecosystem.

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->download the 2003 ADC Report in PDF