MOVING WILD ANIMALS
IS AGAINST THE LAW!
Capturing a wild animal and releasing it in another area is prohibited
by Massachusetts law. Rabies in raccoons is spreading throughout the eastern
United States. Moving animals from one area to another may spread this
or other diseases to new areas.
To protect people and wildlife, DO NOT RELOCATE PROBLEM WILDLIFE!
Wild animals sometimes damage homes, gardens and lawns. Often people want
to catch the problem animals and release them someplace else. Massachusetts
law prohibits moving any live wild animal from one area to another. This
law has been in effect for many years, protecting both people and wildlife.
HERE ARE SOME REASONS WILD ANIMALS SHOULD NOT BE RELOCATED:
- Capturing a wild animal and releasing it somewhere else may spread
disease(s) into populations of animals (including pets) that did
not have the disease(s) previously. Diseases such as Rabies and Canine
Distemper have been spread by people who captured an animal in one area
and released it somewhere else.
- Wild animals already live where you release your problem animal.
Wherever you plan to release a problem animal, there are already resident
animals with established territories competing among themselves for
food and denning sites. When a new animal is introduced, competition
for these limited resources is intensified, causing increased stress
and conflict within the resident population, as well as hardship or
death for the relocated animal.
- Relocated animals often return to where you caught them. Squirrels,
raccoons and other wildlife can return from translocations of 5, 10,
or even 15 miles. Such animals are more likely to be killed by automobiles
or succumb to other accidents as they cross unfamiliar areas while attempting
to return to their original territories.
- Relocation only transfers your problem to someone else. In
an unfamiliar territory, an animal accustomed to living near people
is likely to seek out human habitations and damage someone else's property.
- Moving an animal does not solve the problem. Within a short
period of time, other individuals of the same or another species will
move in, unless food (garbage, pet food, grain) is removed, and access
to gardens, chimneys and attics is blocked.
Information on methods or techniques to control damage caused by wildlife
is available in the Wildlife Program area of
our website or by contacting the MassWildlife
District office which serves your community.
MassWildlife
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