Prairie dog advocates say what is happening along Colorado’s Front Range is a warning sign…one that Montana residents might be familiar with. According to an article via Cowboy State Daily, they argue that nonstop development has wiped out or pushed out huge numbers of prairie dogs, leaving coyotes and other predators to look elsewhere for food, including backyard pets. That frustration has boiled over in Erie, a community north of Denver, where several pets have been killed recently, including a mini Australian shepherd taken from its yard and killed in November. Residents have called on the state to step in, pointing to similar incidents in Nederland, where mountain lions were blamed for killing more than 20 dogs in 2022.

Officials in Boulder County say the situation is not that straightforward. They argue prairie dog numbers are stable overall and note that coyotes do not depend heavily on them, going after rabbits, small animals, and whatever easy meals turn up instead. This pattern is familiar in Montana, where expanding towns are known to overlap with wildlife habitat. Wildlife managers say growth and habitat fragmentation, not a prairie dog shortage, are the real drivers of this conflict. Prairie dog advocates disagree, warning that removing tens of thousands of prey animals disrupts the ecosystem and creates the kind of predator problems now spilling into people’s backyards.

What are your thoughts?

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