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The Quiet Kill

WhiteTail Solutions thins the herd in the suburbs without waking up the neighborhood

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Thursday, December 25, 2008

Four deer were lazily hanging out in Joe Tucker's yard, right along his driveway. They did not gallop away when I pulled in. "That's part of the problem," Tucker's buddy Dan Beyer told me later. "They've lost their fear of man as a predator."

This is why WhiteTail Solutions exists. The company considers its employees "deer management consultants," and use bows and arrows to hunt their prey.

And this is why the company is most active in the affluent suburbs, areas the state Department of Environmental Protection has deemed troublesome for their abundance of deer and lack of hunters. Ninety-nine percent of their hunts, says Tucker, who co-owns the company with his brother Chris and Beyer, occur in Fairfield County.

Man isn't much of a predator here. Deer hunting "is not a way of life" along the Gold Coast, says Patricia Sesto, chair of the Fairfield County Municipal Deer Management Alliance and director of Environmental Affairs for the Town of Wilton. "People haven't grown up with it and aren't educated about it. ... It's just not our pastime."

Land here has been developed in a way — golf courses and wetlands separating office parks — that leaves open space where deer can eat well and breed plentifully, says Howard Kilpatrick, the DEP's biologist in charge of deer management.

When the deer population increases, so do Lyme disease, car collisions and ecological damage.

The number of deer per square mile reaches 60 in some parts of Connecticut, says Kilpatrick. While he says it's difficult to say how many are "too many" for this type of terrain, his educated guess is closer to 10 per square mile.

So, there's WhiteTail Solutions, a company headed by 40-year-old commercial well-driller Joe Tucker, who runs WhiteTail Solutions from his Oxford home.

And "company" may be the wrong word for it. Though it's a registered LLC, WhiteTail Solutions is more like 14 guys who love to hunt, who were raised hunting, who "harvest" deer in towns where guys spend more time bagging Wall Street bucks than hoofed ones.

They do not make a profit for most of their jaunts.: They love to hunt. Most of their hunts are allowed by private-property owners, who were warned by the town and the DEP about deer overpopulation. Sometimes town governments call them. Sometimes neighbors call.

The hunters are amiable, bearded, middle-aged men who choose their words carefully. They live up in places like Watertown, Terryville and Beacon Falls, but will gladly handle the problem of deer overpopulation in suburbs like New Canaan, Ridgefield and Wilton.

You don't hear them. You rarely see them. Although they are all quick with a rifle, they use bows and arrows when they hunt in the wealthy suburbs because a 500-foot range is required for rifle-hunting.

And archery is efficient. Beyer speaks happily about fiberglass arrows and state-of-the-art bows that can launch an arrow at speeds of 300 feet per second.

But they also want to be sensitive to the people whose backyards they're hunting, says Tucker. Arrows are "quiet and travel the distance you'd need if you're hunting the number of acres we need," says Tucker. Guns, he says, have a nasty cultural connotation, adding that, "Nobody ever died from an arrow on CSI: Miami."

I went on a small hunt with Beyer and Tucker on a piece of privately owned property in Ridgefield one bright Saturday morning. We traveled down one of Ridgefield's main arteries, made two turns, parked on the side of a residential yard and walked not over 100 feet into the woods. There sat a battery-powered, time-set feeder that spread corn onto the ground in regular intervals. Above us was a tree stand — a sturdy, one-person platform attached to a tree for an aerial view. This is how you hunt deer in the suburbs.

 

About five years ago, the group started in Ridgefield, the northernmost town on the Gold Coast. The posh town center is often compared to that goldest town on the Gold Coast, New Canaan. Ridgefield also sits on the foothills of the Berkshire Mountains, is sparsely populated (around 700 people per square mile) and, says First Selectman Rudy Marconi, is "ranked at number-one, or close to the top of some surveys of deer-auto accidents."

In 2004, the town decided to form a "deer committee" to address the problem.

"The DEP had told us about the deer overpopulation," says Marconi, "and it was pretty obvious from looking around that we had a lot. We started to trace it to other problems in town." Including Lyme disease.

The WhiteTail guys had been hunting in Ridgefield for years — and now the town government and residents have come to rely on them. They've since branched out into Wilton, Danbury, Seymour, Newtown, New Canaan, Redding, and, more recently, Brookfield.

After I joined the WhiteTail men in the field, Beyer reminded me to check for ticks when I got home. They're careful. They are non-confrontational. They won't hunt in a neighborhood if another hunter is already there.

And they're charitable. They've created a "Hunt to Feed" program that's gathered 1,500 pounds of meat this year, along with other hunters, and donated it to the Connecticut Food Bank. Before that, they also provided meat to be served at fundraisers for Toys for Tots, the American Legion and other nonprofits.

 

The entirety of Fairfield County makes up Zone 11 of the DEP's Deer Management Zones. It and Zone 12, which stretches the rest of the coast from Milford to Stonington, are the problem zones of the 12 deer zones the DEP carves the state into.

Hunter surveys and aerial expeditions have detected the popularly given figure of 60 deer per square mile. So the DEP adopted a few "liberalizations" of hunting regulations to lower the deer count, says Dale May, director of the DEP's Wildlife Division.

The hunting season in most of the state runs Sept. 15 to Dec. 31, but extends until Jan. 31 in Zones 11 and 12. In these areas, you can use bait (like corn) and can harvest an unlimited number of antlerless deer — or does and fawns — which are more important to increasing or maintaining a herd's number than a buck. You can't do any of this in the other 10 zones, which, except for Zone 3 (Hartford and the surrounding area), are largely rural. The DEP is also considering a "special crossbow season" for the two trouble zones.

"Deer have unlimited capacity to breed in these zones," says May. "They have no predators. Bobcats and coyotes are rare, and most of them could not take down a full-grown deer. They may be able to get away with an injured one or a fawn, but if they can get a woodchuck or a possum or a housecat, they won't even try for the deer. ... The other predators, such as wolves and bears, are gone, and aren't coming back."

Man is deer's biggest predator in this terrain, says May, and has been since the days of the Native Americans. But in the days of the financial sector commuter, they seem to have stopped.

Take Wilton, for example, a town where income averages $141,000 and breadwinners mostly commute to Stamford or New York. Wilton has 71 square miles of land and a comfortable density of 654 people per square mile. There are, according to Sesto, nearly 70 deer per square mile.

Lots of deer means auto wrecks. The DEP found more roadkill per square mile in Fairfield County, which includes the Merritt Parkway, routes 7 and 8 and other brisk-but-scenic roadways, than any other part of the state.

The precise number: 1.32 dead deer per square mile, compared to the state average of 0.52.

There's also Lyme disease, one of many bacterial diseases spread by tick-carrying animals, like deer. Since 1996, 29,000 cases of Lyme disease have been reported to the DEP.

Yet, Lyme is a relatively new disease. It was discovered in 1975 in Lyme, Connecticut, which sits toward the end of Zone 11.

Reliable diagnostics either haven't been developed or haven't been implemented, says Maggie Shaw, of the Newtown Lyme Disease Task Force. Shaw's entire family has been fighting Lyme since 1992, and it's caused years of fatigue, illness and developmental damage for herself, her husband and their three children.

The point is: Lyme is new, mysterious, devastating and associated with deer.

So what are the solutions to these problems?

Controlled hunts, the DEP says. Devil's Den Nature Conservatory in Weston has been closed to the public on weekdays this fall to allow hunters to shoot deer. Huntington State Park in Redding was opened for bow-hunting only, provided hunters stay away from one heavily people-populated area. Sesto has been orchestrating controlled hunts in Wilton around the Rock Lake and City Lake reservoirs over the last six years. She thinks the hunts will harvest 80 to 100 deer this year.

What's the solution when you don't have large state parks or protected reservoirs to provide a controlled hunt?

WhiteTail Solutions.

Or at least that's what the Selectmen Board of Brookfield, another 60-deer-per-square-mile town in Upper Fairfield County, decided. The town hired WhiteTail hunters to patrol three town-owned pieces of land.

"They are there in their tree stands, shooting razor-sharp arrows directly down," says First Selectman Robert Silvaggi, who adds that the town isn't paying the hunters. "The arrows travel only a few feet. They go right through the deer, and there's little chance of anyone getting hurt."

It wasn't accepted by the entire town. Silvaggi says that a town meeting last October discussing the hunt this fall revealed more people support it than are against it, but "you are always going to have some people who want to save Bambi."

 

While Joe Tucker laments the decline of hunting in Connecticut, Priscilla Feral celebrates it.

"What happens when all these people die out?" asks the president of Darien-based Friends of Animals. "Haven't their children discovered video games and better things to do than mutilate a deer?"

"Unequivocally opposed to hunting," Friends of Animals makes its presence known at municipal meetings where controlled hunts are discussed. They picketed Wilton's first WhiteTail hunt and were involved in a battle over Bluff Point State Park in Groton, — a patch of land trapped between a busy Route 1 and the Long Island Sound — where the DEP decides each year exactly how many deer will be killed there.

The larger problem, says Feral, are people.

"Deer don't cause global warming, deer don't pollute rivers. Compared to that, a little damage to some shrubbery is nothing."

She adds, "We've overpopulated and mismanaged this planet and we can't get indignant when some deer come into 'our' area."

As for the deer-to-vehicle collisions, "You'll notice they go up during hunting season when deer are running more from hunters," she says.

(Note: Hunting season does coincide with mating season, when deer activity is already greater.) As for Lyme disease? "It seems ridiculous to me that you are going to get rid of this disease by eliminating one mammal."

Tucker wants nothing to do with people like Feral — no arguments, no debates, no encounters. WhiteTail isn't in the business of changing minds, he says.

"There are some people you are never going to convince and I'm OK with that," he says. "I'm a very choice kind of guy. If you don't want hunters around you or your property, I respect that. I only want that you respect the rights of the owners who are OK with that."

When asked if he's ever had any encounters with the animal-rights crowd, Tucker, as always, is careful with his words, but his eventual answer is no.

"I try to avoid that confrontation before it even happens," he says. "It's a no-win sort of thing."

 

He does make a brief comment about the middle-of-the-road folks in suburbia. "You don't need Bambi. You don't need a dead deer to make people uncomfortable," he says. "It's the camouflage and the trucks and the equipment. I get a lot of [landowners] who were uncomfortable having us come down at first, and then they become OK with it and we wave to each other and sometimes they tell me [about their initial indecision]: 'I just wasn't used to it.'"

 

editor@hartfordadvocate.com

Comments (59)
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I just bet that Tucker doesn't want any arguments with people "like" Feral....he couldn't possibly win in the face of logic, knowledge and common sense.
Posted by Greer Ashton on 12.23.08 at 11.44
It is truly amazing how brainwashed the general public allows itself to become.

There was NO deer overpopulation at the time of the enactment of the Deer Management Act (1974) - since no one was counting (as if they are counted now!), they were estimated between 3,000and at most 7,000 in ALL of CT!

There has been no deer overpopulation when these so-called professional deer committees formed to deal with the "problem". It is exactly because of their push for more hunting that we have more deer, it is nature's way of making sure that their species doesn't die out. What a perfect way of "managing" deer to assure that after every hunt, deer will be replaced through twin/triple births and deer from other areas can also move into an area that can support that number of deer. If the carrying capacity were to exceed, deer would naturally regulate themselves. Since we have never seen deer dying by the hundreds and thousands as for example in Michigan several years ago, where deer were overmanaged for maximum sustained yield, several hundred thousand starved to death in the winter!

It is also fact that the number of hunters are going down; for every 100 hunters that stop pursuing this bloodsport, only 68 replace them - in a few years, their numbers in CT may well be under the present 1% . It is no wonder that groups like Whitetail Solutions are worried that their recreation may soon come to a halt.

BTW - mating season coincides with only a short duration of the hunting season - certainly NOT from the middle of September until the end of January (you'd think that hunters would know that!) - but then, again, this is all just part of the misinformation that is continually forced upon the public by the DEP and its henchmen.
Posted by Natalie Jarnstedt on 12.23.08 at 12.08
Logic and common sense with Folks like that! You must be kidding! You are blind to the facts! The only misinformation "forced" to the public is from you anti hunting
bunny hugging folks who think with clouded minds! When the unfortunate day comes when your family contracts Lyme disease or a deer goes through your windshield to maime or kill your loved one will you feel the same way? Wake up!
Deal with reality instead of the emotional feelings of everyday is a perfect world where everything coexists despite the pain and suffering of the human race. Most of you bunny huggers would rather see animals first and human folks second.
Posted by Betty on 12.23.08 at 18.51
Kill Bambi- yes. If you live in the country like me and your whole family has Lyme disease then maybe you would change your opinion. Also most if not all of the deer is donated to food banks. Bottom line there are just too many of these around-- and they do (fact) support the breeding cycle for ticks that carry Lyme disease and several other parasitic infections. The state does not allow wild dogs, cats, or much of anything wonder the streets-- why deer. They are dirty rats with antlers.
Posted by Will on 12.23.08 at 20.01
" It is exactly because of their push for more hunting that we have more deer, it is nature's way of making sure that their species doesn't die out. What a perfect way of "managing" deer to assure that after every hunt, deer will be replaced through twin/triple births and deer from other areas can also move into an area that can support that number of deer. If the carrying capacity were to exceed, deer would naturally regulate themselves."

You say deer "regulate themselves" when in reality you have no clue what you are talking about. Deer, like any species let to overrun an area don't "regulate" anything. They breed and eat and breed some more. You give them sentience and rational thought when in reality they just go with their natural urges and do what is natural.

Humans have hunted them for centuries and will continue to do so. Their are people who have dedicated their lives and careers to making sure the deer population is where it should be so that they can thrive and we can coexist with them. They love deer. And they love hunting deer. They would hate to see deer become endangered or extinct.

Also, think of hunting as the original and ultimate free range method of farming. The deer is completely un-hampered to live its life before it is taken by a hunter.
Posted by Steve on 12.24.08 at 6.08
You hunters are a riot. Any way you can turn those arrows on each other and thin the human herd?
Just askin'
Posted by Morton on 12.24.08 at 6.22
RE: Morton-
"You hunters are a riot. Any way you can turn those arrows on each other and thin the human herd?
Just askin' "

If so, I'd start with irrational people who don't improve the herd - like you. You seem to forget all us hunters have the weapons - How you going to stop me? Harsh language? Let me quote Monty - "What are you going to do? Bleed on me?"
Posted by Oakenheart on 12.24.08 at 9.11
The real problem is that the human species is out of control. We ourselves have bred like rats to the tune of six BILLION. Our species population has doubled since I was a kid in the '50s. Twenty BILLION and Thirty BILLION are not far off. We are destroying the natural world which we ourselves NEED to sustain ourselves. It is because of humans that deer's natural predators have dsappeared.

HOWEVER, we are faced with an urgent, immediate proble. Lyme disease is RAMPANT, and is reaching epidemic proportions. I myself have chronic Lyme, undiagnosed for 15 years. Do we "cull" the human population? Ain't gonna happen, altho the state of the world is such that eventually humans will be controlled calamitously by forces of disease, war, environmental degradation, massive climate shifts causing droughts and storms of biblical proportions. Steve said it right when he said we should consider deer as free-range farming. I have no problem eating a chicken who was allowed to run free, peck the earth, and feel the sunshine on his back, just before he was humanely and quickly dispatched for dinner. The same can hold true for deer. I love watching deer as much as the next bambi-hugger. I used to be against hunting, but it was the LOVE and SPORT of killing animals that I disturbed me. The Indians and the Pilgrims didn't kill wildlife because they LOVED to kill animals. They needed to eat. If deer can be harvested and their meat provided to the needy, I have no problem with hunting them humanely. I myself would rather eat a Whopper.
Posted by Paul on 12.24.08 at 9.40
If you truly loved animals as you say you do you'd recognize that deer require predators to enforce natural selection. We've eliminated the wolves and big cats as they present an unacceptable risk to humans, so what's left is either cars and disease or hunters. Most deer east of the Mississippi were reintroduced around the turn of the last century by sportsmen to repair the devastation caused by market hunters. Transplanted stock and strict control over harvests are what brought the deer herds back from extinction. Now well meaning but misguided fools would destroy all that by allowing overpopulation and the inevitable disease and starvation it brings.
Posted by Uncle Lar on 12.24.08 at 15.16
I'll be glad to give up hunting if the Greenies want a real back to nature solution to counter balance the out of control deer populations and unstable ecologies.

The only thing that keeps deer populations in check is starvation and hunting. Well if you don't want people like me hunting then you have to restore the natural predators. Let's see I think we can breed up a few thousand cougars and 10s of thousands of wolves. That will take care of the the New England states. But we can't have our predators being interfered with by human behavior. So all those vehicles have to go. Can't have you kill something with your cars. And those big predators need more room to roam, so all your housing developments with their malls, shopping centers, and big yards need to be plowed under.

Now you can't complain when the wolves eat your dogs, or the cougar decides your toddler makes an easier meal than chasing down any deer.

If you take this arguement out to it's logical point we are all living in the Dark Ages again with 30 year life expectancies. And you accuse us outdoorsman and hunters of being illogical? Sounds to me like some one needs to look in the mirror before throwing stones.
Posted by grayburst on 12.25.08 at 10.01
I'll be glad to give up hunting if the Greenies want a real back to nature solution to counter balance the out of control deer populations and unstable ecologies.

The only thing that keeps deer populations in check is starvation and hunting. Well if you don't want people like me hunting then you have to restore the natural predators. Let's see I think we can breed up a few thousand cougars and 10s of thousands of wolves. That will take care of the the New England states. But we can't have our predators being interfered with by human behavior. So all those vehicles have to go. Can't have you kill something with your cars. And those big predators need more room to roam, so all your housing developments with their malls, shopping centers, and big yards need to be plowed under.

Now you can't complain when the wolves eat your dogs, or the cougar decides your toddler makes an easier meal than chasing down any deer.

If you take this arguement out to it's logical point we are all living in the Dark Ages again with 30 year life expectancies. And you accuse us outdoorsman and hunters of being illogical? Sounds to me like some one needs to look in the mirror before throwing stones.
Posted by grayburst on 12.25.08 at 10.01
I don't understand the anti-hunting mentality. I assume they are just like most liberals--if they don't understand something they want to ban it. Bottom line is that venison is good and is far more lean and healthy than beef, chicken or pork.
Posted by FatWhiteMan on 12.25.08 at 16.53
Oh Oakenhurt. You are such a man. I bet you have a lot of guns to substitute for that tiny penis.
And "FatWhiteMan," I assume you are just like most morons. If they don't understand something, they assume it must be "liberal."
Posted by Morton on 12.26.08 at 5.21
Whitetail Solutions and the Hunt To Feed program are shining examples of how bowhunters can help to control the exploding deer population concerns in CT and also help to feed the less fortunate in our communities. A real win/win solution. Bravo Whitetail Solutions and CT bowhunters!!!
Posted by Jon Nickless on 12.26.08 at 5.40
I commend the author for an honest and refreshingly unbiased story on hunting for a change. Seems like hunters always get bad press if they get any at all. Those opposed to hunting make a valiant effort to be heard but I fear that those only viewing comments on issue are likely to this get some false sense that opposition is high when it reality, only those opposed usually take the time to write.

I am honestly shocked at comments that deer overpopulation does not really exist!!! How can the science be ignored and how in the world can you ignore the science and only allow emotions to guide the decision making process???

There is no point in me trying to explain the need to reduce deer numbers to acceptable levels when SO MUCH fact based data already exists. Google "too many deer" or "negative impacts of too many deer" or anything along those lines......read it.......and tell me these professionals in so many differnt places are ALL still somehow wrong????

If organizations like the Greewich Audobon (an organization whose single purpose to to PRESERVE Nature) can clearly see the NEED to reduce deer numbers because of the NEGATIVE impacts that occur with excessive deer numbers - than clearly the rest of us can - or at least respect it.

Organizations charged with reviewing the dilema and, researching alternatives and proposing a solution all eventually arrive at the same few conclusions, that YES the problem is real - just leaving them alone is not a responsible alternative - and that hunting is the most viable form of control to maintain healthy deer population.

But don't take my word on it - research it on your own - and stop with the rediculous claims that the problem is not real.

Posted by Walt Charczynski on 12.26.08 at 9.15
To the Guys of Whitetails Solutions,,,, Keep up the good work. git -r-done and keep the brown backs fallin down. Dont worry about what the anti's have to say. How can they comment on something they have never experienced nor do the even understand. So do what you do best, HUNT!!!!!!
Posted by Brett Homer / Backwoods Whitetails Outfitters on 12.28.08 at 16.42
I just read the article and have to say hats off to you Mr. Tucker and friends. I lived in area 10 most of my archery hunting life and yes there is a need to control the population of deer. The Groton Long Point area was loaded when I lived in that neighborhood and we took advantage of the "baiting the D.E.P allows...(like we really needed to at all. Not) This country was founded on the principals of the the Almighty Living God`s Word. For the people who are not familiar with this read Psalm 8...Genesis 1...God gave us the right to control the herd, "Friends of Animals"...got one thing to say to you..."if you want to protect the enviroment...hunt it!" Psh
Posted by pilgrim61 on 12.29.08 at 7.43
Excellent article and excellent public service being offered by the Whitetail Solutions folks. I for one hope and pray that we never lose the "right" (and it should be a right) to hunt (or fish for food), and, that I never have to personally witness what would happen to our environment and the deer themselves should deer hunting ever be totally outlawed in Connecticut.
In my opinion, "anti-hunters" are just mis-informed human beings that are losing or have lost touch with some of our (humans) most basic natural instincts. Not all humans hunted but I venture to guess that most all appreciated our (humans) place in nature and the gift natures bounty has always provided to us free of charge.
Posted by robert maietta on 12.30.08 at 5.46
I love how humans think they are the superior beings who deserve to manage every other living thing. Hunting is fine if you are using the animal for food. Wanting to wipe everything out is sad.

Killing a few deer won't solve the deer tick problem. A big carrier of deer ticks are mice. Mice can get into your homes. Oops - now that I said it, the kill them all folks will have bow hunting for mice!

Again hunting for food is fine. I am not anti hunting. If people want to allow hunting on their property, that is their right. Let's just stop the hysteria that we need to kill everything just to kill it.
Posted by Karen on 1.5.09 at 1.51
I don't get that Karen - where in there ANYWHERE does anyone say we need to kill everything?

Deer are the primary host of these tick - otherwise they would be called "mouse ticks"
Posted by Walt on 1.7.09 at 7.21
Yup, predators would be a logical solution, but they are being exterminated as soon as they make an appearance. because hunters don't want to share deer with them.

Deer populations would never run amok without man's management and interference - it never ceases to astonish how little hunters and their supporters know of deer reproduction.

Hunting spurs reproduction and the state's management techniques make certain that deer numbers stay at a high number. Why? To make sure that hunters don't have to wait for very long to come across deer or that they don't have to freeze off their bippies in tree stands, where food is used to lure deer to them - talk about laziness - how is that a challenge?

If anyone would bother reading daily news reports on deer management from all over the USA, they would learn that as soon as deer numbers threaten to get below the desired /planned number, reproductive spurring techniques are immediately implemented.

DEER HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH TICKS and lyme disease, other than being a convenient host! In the absence of deer, any medium-sized mammal will do. In horse country, it is a known fact that horses take the place of deer!

Deer NEVER get infected; deer do not transmit Lyme disease! Over 40 species of small mammals are vectors for the spirochete...so how are deer to blame?

Walt - you question Karen's comment - the solution according to folks like Whitetail Solutions IS to kill deer, have they in any way suggested alternatives? I didn't think so; that's their businress - to K-I-L-L! Have you heard otherwise?

Walt - you'd better study up on Lyme disease - first of all, both terms, deer tick and mouse tick would be incorrect; it is correctly named the black-footed tick or the Latin name, but I'm sure the former is easier for you to remember.
Posted by Garos on 1.26.09 at 14.31
Deer populations have been reduced, and never recovered since we settled America. From 40 million nationwide to the currant 25 million. Don't turn our lack of tolerance into "overpopulation". The people should be making the sacrifices,not the deer, or any animal.
Posted by Randy on 3.4.09 at 5.00
Wow. I can't believe all the commentary on this topic. Hunting has been a way of life since the beginning of human existence. It's survival. All of the yuppies and anti everythingers out there are clearly in denial. Humans are the dominant species on this planet, and there is no reason why we should not be trying to preserve ourselves. If an over population of deer in a particular area is causing disease and fatalities, then steps need to be taken. Virus' are alive and I bet when one of you tree huggers gets sick you take medicine to kill it? Shame on you!
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The other predators, such as wolves and bears, are gone, and aren't coming back."
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