Wildlife Services Kills Less (but a Lot) in 2020

The US Department of Agriculture’s Wildlife Services program trapped, shot, and poisoned more than 430,000 native animals last year, including hundreds of wolves, bears, and mountain lions, thousands of foxes, more than 25,000 beavers, and more than 62,000 coyotes. Shocking as these numbers are, the total is actually significantly lower than the more than 1 million killed in each of the previous several years.

Wet beaver at the edge of river, washing hands, curious.
Photo by Layne VR

Wildlife Services is tasked with responding to human–wildlife conflicts. This includes important work such as keeping birds away from airport runways and reducing the transmission of rabies. But all too often, Wildlife Services needlessly resorts to ineffective lethal measures rather than proven nonlethal techniques to address wildlife challenges. Such go-to Wildlife Services devices as steel-jaw leghold traps and neck snares are not only cruel, but also inherently indiscriminate. Last year alone, traps and snares unintentionally killed hundreds of river otters, raccoons, turtles, and foxes, among numerous other species. Many of these deaths could have been avoided if the program had relied instead on electric fencing to protect livestock, flow devices to prevent flooding by beaver dams, and other such measures.

Q article single.

Program Terms: Terrestrial Wildlife

AWI Quarterly Terms: Quick Read

Related News

Published: October 10, 2025

IUCN Reaffirms Long-Tailed Macaques’ Endangered Status Despite Industry Pressure

In Program: Terrestrial Wildlife

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) today released an update to its Red List of Threatened Species. The update revealed that the long-tailed...

Published: August 21, 2025

AWI Funds Research to Alleviate Human-Wildlife Conflicts, Animal Suffering

In Program: Terrestrial Wildlife

The Animal Welfare Institute (AWI) announced today the eight recipients of its Christine Stevens Wildlife Award who are developing humane solutions to human-wildlife conflicts and...

Published: June 24, 2025

Refuge from Cruel Trapping Act Reintroduced to Protect Wildlife and Pets on Public Lands

In Program: Companion Animals, Terrestrial Wildlife

The Animal Welfare Institute (AWI) endorses the Refuge from Cruel Trapping Act, reintroduced today in the US House of Representatives by Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-NY)....

Published: June 2, 2025

Colorado Now Leads Country in Comprehensive Approach to Fighting Wildlife Trafficking

In Program: Terrestrial Wildlife

Today, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis signed S.B. 25-168 into law to combat wildlife trafficking. The bipartisan legislation, which is unique among states for the number...