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Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making

As a conservation officer, it's your job to ensure the well-being of wildlife and the safety of humans. Sometimes, these two goals come into conflict and it's never an easy situation to deal with.

You've received a call from the local police informing you about a cougar running loose in a popular town park. This isn't the first you've heard about the animal -- there have been a number of complaints about a cougar in that area for weeks. You arrive on the scene and discover the cougar has stalked some mountain bikers and killed a dog; the situation with this animal has definitely escalated.

After a long search with tracking dogs, you get close enough to the cougar to force it to climb about 100 feet up a tree. You've succeeded in cornering the cougar, but now you're the one feeling cornered. You have a really tough decision to make.

The normal procedure in this kind of situation would be to drug the animal and return it to its natural habitat. However, because of this cougar's history and because he's high up in the tree, you're wondering if it might just be better to kill it. You hate the idea of killing an animal unnecessarily, and you know this would be a very unpopular decision.

What do you do?

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    From outside the U.S., please call +1 (424) 750-3900
  • North Dakota Career Resource Network
    ndcrn@nd.gov | (701) 328-9733

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