Published:
July 20, 2025
Last updated:
July 28, 2025
5
min read

Understanding Livestock Predators and How to Protect Your Animals

Predator attacks can devastate a farm overnight—chickens vanishing, goats mauled, or calves injured. Whether you’re raising poultry, cattle, sheep, goats, or alpacas, it’s essential to understand what predators threaten your animals, how to prevent attacks, and what’s legal when it comes to protecting your stock.

Let’s break down the most common predator threats to livestock in North America, prevention strategies for each species, and humane (and legal) solutions for keeping your animals safe.

natural predators of livestock like wolves moving through the forest

Most Common Livestock Predators in North America

Different regions have different predator profiles, but here are the most common predators across the U.S. and Canada:

Species-Specific Livestock Protection Strategies

🐓 Chickens

Common predators: Raccoons, hawks, foxes, weasels, snakes, dogs
Prevention:

.🦆 Ducks and Geese

Common predators: Foxes, raccoons, coyotes, snapping turtles, dogs
Predator Prevention for Ducks and Geese:

🪶 Pheasants and Quail

Common predators: Snakes, raccoons, hawks, owls, weasels, rats
Predator Prevention for Game Birds:

🐇 Rabbits

Common predators: Hawks, owls, foxes, dogs, raccoons, snakes
Predator Prevention for Rabbits:

🐐 Goats & Sheep

Common predators: Coyotes, bobcats, mountain lions, wolves
Prevention:

🐄 Cattle (Especially Calves)

Common predators: Coyotes, wolves, mountain lions, bears
Prevention:

🐖 Pigs & Piglets

Common predators: Coyotes, feral hogs, bobcats, bears
Prevention:

🐴 Horses & Donkeys

Common predators: Mountain lions, wolves (foals or mini breeds), coyotes
Protection for Equines:

🦙 Llamas & Alpacas

Common predators: Coyotes, dogs, mountain lions
Livestock Protection for Camelids:

🦤 Emus & Ostriches

Common predators (chicks): Foxes, bobcats, raccoons, large birds of prey
Protecting Ratites:

🐝 Beehives

Common predators: Bears, skunks, raccoons
Prevention:

Legal Considerations for Predator Control

What You Can Legally Do as a Farmer

Tools for Predator Prevention on Your Farm

Tool/Method Best For Cost Estimate
Electric fencing Coyotes, wolves, bears $100–$500+
Guardian dogs/donkeys Sheep, goats, cattle $500–$2,000
Motion-activated lights Poultry, barnyards $30–$100
Trail cameras Identifying predators $50–$200
Predator deterrent kits Multi-species (visual/noise) $20–$75

Take a Proactive, Layered Approach

Predator control is a combination of smart infrastructure, regular monitoring, and knowing your local threats. No single solution works forever, but by using layers of protection—guardian animals, fencing, shelter, and legal tools—you greatly reduce the risk to your livestock.

Always consult local wildlife or agricultural extension offices for predator-specific guidance.

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With FarmKeep, you can track animal health, losses, weight gain, and even predator incidents—all in one place. Stay ahead of the next threat with better record keeping.