deer peers out from a snowy forest

Volume 60  Issue 4

Fall 2011

A wary deer peers out from a February forest. As deer flourish in the absence of natural predators, and suburbs extend tendrils into formerly wooded areas, deer-human conflicts inevitably arise. In the past, these conflicts most often have been resolved through culling of deer populations. Immunocontraception drugs offer a way to keep deer populations in check through nonlethal, relatively nonintrusive means. Scientists, citizens, and many animal welfare advocates are increasingly supportive of immunocontraception as a humane method of controlling wildlife populations in lieu of traditional lethal methods. AWI examines the benefits of immunocontraception as well as the resistance to such methods by some.

Photo by Jon



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Bill Would Give Class B Dealers the Boot

Animals in Laboratories, Companion Animals

Getting Trapped in the System

Terrestrial Wildlife

NIH “Anticipates” End to Bad Relationship

Animals in Laboratories, Companion Animals