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Wildlife Damage Management (Bernalillo County)

Impact Reports | Plan Details

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Plan Goal

To make farmers, ranchers, and the general public aware of contemporary practices utilized to reduce or eliminate animal damage problems. To develop innovative and cost effective methods to cope with wildlife damage problems.

Situation Statement

Many species of birds, mammals and reptiles can be problematic for the general public, agriculture and commercial industry in Bernalillo County each year.Some species, such as rattlesnakes and rodents can be a significant source of hazard to the health and safety of many people within the county. Urban spraul causes relocation of wildlife into undesirable locations. Therefore, technical information outlining the methods of control for wildlife damage is greatly needed. Wildlife damage control methodologies and the legal constraints surrounding control change rapidly. This requires farmers, ranchers and the general public to have access to up-to-date information on control techniques and the legalities pertaining to those techniques. The public, including youth will improve their understanding of renewable natural resource issues and the consequences of their actions. An effective educational program such as this will create informed decision makers that will ultimately lead to actions that protect and improve the environment. Extension programs have made farmers, ranchers, and the general public aware of contemporary practices utilized to reduce or eliminate animal damage problems. Practical training materials and instruction for vertebrate pest control is provided at a variety of workshops including the Ornamental and Turf CEU Workshops, Master Gardeners Program and one-on-one consultations.

Target Audience and Actions

The target audience is composed of farmers, ranchers, and the general public in both rural and urban areas of Bernalillo County. Up-to-date material on wildlife damage control will be distributed by the county extension faculty, agriculturalists, industry and the general public through extension publications, workshops, presentations and verbal communications. Site visits will also help idenfify problems.

Short-Term Objectives

At least 50 farmers, ranchers, and members of the general public will gain awareness of up-to-date practices to reduce or eliminate animal damage problems. At least 20 of these individuals will apply one or more of these practices.

Medium-Term Objectives

Countywide impact associated with the level of wildlife damage will be decreased by 10% over the next five years.

Long-Term Objectives

Improve wildlife damage management decisions by local natural resource management agencies, farmers, ranchers, and the general public. Improve knowledge level of county clientele regarding wildlife damage management through in-service trainings.

Evaluation Plan

Knowledge change will be measured utilizing pre- and post-training tests for attendees of CEU training workshops. Verbal and written responses from clientele concerning the effectiveness of the methodologies employed will be used to evaluate the success of the program.