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<br /> PAWS -The Eiffects of Feeding Wildlife Page 1 of 2 <br /> s j <br /> x ~s <br /> } .,a r V , <br /> Y a ~ ~f~ t1 <br /> r e ~~x <br /> 3 n ~ i s <br /> ,p Efa rat a~ <br /> ~1 J } ~1 f ~ ~ 1, <br /> z ~3~txi,~s ,X <br /> Y a Ch ~\j `Y <br /> .JY u..~~ 7 ~...,.m..... <br /> e Effect i illife <br /> Many people enjoy feeding wildlife because it allows them to have close contact with the animals, or because they <br /> believe they are helping the animals survive. While seeing wild animals up close can be enjoyable, providing wild <br /> animals with a steady, human-supplied food source nearly always leads to problems for both the animals and humans. <br /> There are many good reasons not to feed wildlife including: <br /> 1. When young wild animals are taught to depend on ahuman-provided food source, they may not fully <br /> develop essential foraging skills. Animals who are raised relying on humans for food may struggle to survive <br /> in the absence of that artificial food source when they disperse from their parents' territory. <br /> 2. Wild animals who are used to being fed by humans commonly lose their fear of people. Animals who are <br /> unafraid of people will approach them for food, and are sometimes mistaken as rabid, aggressive or mean, then <br /> killed for that behavior. They also become easy targets for kids with BB guns and others who mean them harm. <br /> An instinctive wariness of people is important to a wild animal's survival. <br /> The food humans usually feed to wild animals is not nutritionally complete, and it can cause serious <br /> health problems for the animals, especially when they are young and still developing. Most wild animals <br /> are opportunistic and will concentrate on the easiest food source available. When a constant human-provided <br /> food source is available, animals who would normally have a varied diet may switch to eating mainly this <br /> constantly available food. Just like humans, most wild animals need a variety of foods in their diet, and if they fill <br /> up on "junk" food, they will not get the nutrients they need to stay healthy. Because most people will feed <br /> animals food that they have in their house -people food -which bears no resemblance to what the animals eat <br /> in the wild, it really is junk food to the animals. <br /> 4. A constant, human-provided food source may attract many more wild animals to the area than would <br /> normally be found there. Who doesn't like a free meal? When food is readily available, animals will gather in <br /> abnormally large numbers. This means that if one animal in the group has an illness or disease, it can spread <br /> throughout the group. Many wild animals do not interact with others of their own species except during mating <br /> season and when raising their young. This is one way to limit diseases among a wild population. By gathering <br /> these animals together in unnatural groups, these diseases can spread much more quickly and can destroy a <br /> large number of animals. <br /> 5. Reproduction rates may also be affected when an artificial food source is readily available. In the wild, <br /> the number of animals being born is often directly related to the amount of natural food available. The number of <br /> animals surviving will also depend on how much food is available. This is nature's way of keeping a balance. <br /> When an unnatural food supply becomes available, animals may produce more young and soon there may be <br /> more animals living in the area than what the natural food sources can support. <br /> 6. We commonly receive phone calls at the PAWS Wildlife Center from people whose neighbors have been <br /> feeding wild animals. Often, the wild animals have become an incredible nuisance and the caller wants to kill <br /> or remove them. Many people do not think about the neighborhood impact when they start feeding wildlife. Wild <br /> animals do not usually discriminate between one person and another, and will often start pestering neighbors. <br /> The animals may also cause damage to homes and property because they expect to be fed and have lost their <br /> fear of people. <br /> The best thing you can do to care for the wild animals on your property is to give them habitat, not handouts. <br /> N~ature;scaping is a great way to provide the animals with natural sources of food and shelter that will not put them in <br /> danger the way ahuman-provided food source will. You will still be able to enjoy wildlife on your property, but at a safe <br /> distance for both you and the animals. 9 <br /> http://www.paws.org/feeding-wildlife.html 10/8/2010 <br /> <br />