A CLOSER LOOK -- When wildlife and suburbia clash
- Share via
Deepa Bharath
NEWPORT-MESA -- Gory tales of coyotes attacking pets are piling up in
the community.
Particularly hit by the problem are residents who live in the Back Bay
area where coyotes that inhabit the ecological reserve find several
points of entry leading into residential neighborhoods.
This year, several residents say, has been particularly problematic
and that the attacks have been more frequent and have happened in areas
where coyotes were not all that common over the years.
But contrary to popular opinion, both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach
officials say this year is no different from any other.
Newport Beach officials say it is a problem that has plagued most of
the city for years.
None of the city’s neighborhoods, except maybe West Newport, is immune
from these wild, yet increasingly urban beasts that prey mostly on small
domestic pets, according to Eric Metz, Newport Beach senior animal
control officer.
Costa Mesa resident Heidi Hansen recently lost her black cat, Bootsy,
to a coyote attack near her Mesa Verde North neighborhood.
Hansen said she was shocked, disturbed and upset when she found the
cat, which was named for her white boots, decapitated and skinned in Moon
Park about three days after she was missing.
Coyotes are a relatively new issue for her neighborhood, Hansen said.
“I have lived here for 36 years,” she said. “And we have never had
this problem.”
Not so, city officials say. According to Costa Mesa animal control
officials, coyotes have been regular visitors at Mesa Verde Country
Club’s golf course for several years.
Hansen says she is upset she was never informed about the coyotes, but
Costa Mesa Police Sgt. Don Holford said animal control officers have
continually been handing out fliers in affected neighborhoods.
“We even have them at our front desk,” he said. “It’s a known fact we
have coyotes at the golf course all the time. They’ve also been seen
quite a few times near the [Santa Ana] River bed and Talbert Park.”
Holford said the city has shot coyotes in the past at the golf course
after getting permission from the state Department of Fish and Game.
“But I don’t think we’ve done it at least in the last couple of
years,” he said.
ALWAYS A PROBLEM
In and around Newport Beach, residents feel the coyotes are getting
more and more brazen and brutal in their attacks.
Barbara Demmocks, a Santa Ana Heights resident, said her baby emu was
killed by a coyote two weeks ago.
“We see the coyotes all the time,” she said. “Just over the last two
weeks, we’ve lost our emu, three chickens and two roosters.”
Demmocks said coyotes have always been a problem for pet owners in the
Back Bay.
“We know this is coyote territory,” she said. “But the last six months
have been worse than usual.”
Sightings and evidence are also very common and almost an everyday
occurrence, she said.
“We saw a coyote last night,” Demmocks said. “And there were rabbit
remains in our garden three days ago.”
But she added that she is not in favor of killing the animals.
“These coyotes are just being coyotes,” she said. “They’re doing what
comes naturally to them. Unless they overpopulate too much, I don’t think
killing them is such a good idea.”
JUST ANIMALS?
Also, another common denominator in most of the attacks reported this
year is the way in which the animals have been hunted.
At least two women who lost their cats talked about the heads being
cut off as if their pets were part of some Satanic ritual. But officials
were quick to discount that possibility.
Metz said that is how coyotes devour their prey, by feeding on the
organs and leaving the rest of the carcass behind.
According to officials in both cities, coyotes are found in all areas
of Orange County. They do not require wide open spaces to survive. For
generations, they have lived and survived very well in urban areas.
Though they are not tame animals, they are very comfortable living
physically close to human beings. They are not afraid and are often seen
trotting along a few feet of joggers, bikers and horseback riders.
They have been known to attack human beings on rare occasions and
those usually happen only when they are attacked or provoked. Recently, a
3-year-old Mission Viejo boy was attacked by a coyote in a public park.
Several animal control officials believe the best form of offense when
it comes to coyotes is defense.
Eradication or relocation of the urban coyote is not effective, they
say. Experts believe that these types of programs actually provide a sort
of vacuum in habitats and actually cause these animals to have larger
litters that ultimately increase their population.
Also, by trapping or killing the older coyotes, communities are left
with the young ones that are not skilled hunters and tend to attack
domestic pets. The older and wiser possess the skills to hunt animals in
the wild, such as rabbits and rodents.
LOOKING FOR FOOD
Local residents, however, continue to live in fear of losing their
pets.
Last week, an Irvine Avenue woman who lost her cat, put up fliers in
her block warning her neighbors about the attacks. In May, a Costa Mesa
neighbor did the same along Orange Avenue after her pet had become a
victim.
Joel Pasco, a local veterinarian and owner of All Creatures Care
Cottage in Costa Mesa, said he has heard more reports of coyote attacks
in the area this year than in any other -- probably the most in the last
20 years.
He attributes it to a dry summer that has left little food or water
for coyotes in the wild. So they come hunting in local neighborhoods, he
said.
“Yes, the Back Bay may be five or six blocks away from Costa Mesa
homes,” said Pasco, also the veterinary director at the Wetlands and
Wildlife Center in Huntington Beach.
“But that doesn’t mean your animals are safe. Coyotes can jump over
8-foot fences.”
They also get a drink from backyard swimming pools, he said.
Coyotes often attack their prey by biting off their heads to make sure
they’re not attacked in turn, Pasco said.
“These animals are opportunists,” he said. “They wait for the right
time and then attack.”
But the animals have been part of our landscape for a long, long time,
he added.
“They’ve been here even before we got here and they’re going to
continue to be here,” Pasco said. “It’s just something we have to accept
and learn to live with.”
FYI
CAUTION AGAINST COYOTES
* Fence off animal enclosures, fully if possible
* Keep cats and small dogs indoors or in close presence of an adult
* Feed pets indoors
* Store trash in covered heavy-duty containers
* Keep yards free from potential shelter such as thick brush and weeds
* Enclose the bottom of porches and decks
* Eliminate potential food and water sources such as fallen fruit and
standing water
* Deepa Bharath covers public safety and courts. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.