Man I really hate the "if you kill coyotes you end up with even more coyotes" BS!!!
If thats the case we should be having HUGE litters here. Guess what, we dont, and we havent since we clobbered coyote numbers back in the control areas 4-5 years ago (and keep them more or less suppressed). Fecundity is and always will be a function of resource availability and individual animal age and health!
It was a THEORY, a theory based on very assumptive "research" (I use the term loosely).
As for coyotes effect on "nest predator" numbers, I think this number is exaggerated. Coyotes will be extremely hard on red fox, but I think the rest is very dependent on habitat type. You get into more "eastern" habitat types with lots of timber and heavier cover types, I think the level of predation you see isnt near as high as some would have you believe. Coon are a good example. Where I grew up, a lot of coon "denned" in cattails buried in the snow as that was the only cover in a lot of areas. I think the coyotes were pretty hard on those coon over the winter. But eastern or southern coon is going to be a different situation.
If I was interested in protecting birds, id be adopting a practice of removing ALL predators, from coyotes to possum.
Its important to note too, not all nest predators are equal. Possum and skunks may take a lot of nests, but they dont kill the hen. A coyote however is much more likely to kill the hen, thus eliminating any re-nest attempt.
Habitat vs. predator control.
Why not have both?
Habitat of course is important. But just think what can be accomplished with excellent habitat AND effective predator management?
We've been in this sort of "save the predator" era now for a good 20ish years now. All you hear is habitat habitat habitat, they're not wrong.
100 years ago we killed predators, all of them. I'm not saying we need to (or even could) get back to that, but that's the way it was. The fox killed their chickens, the coyotes killed their lambs, the wolves killed their calves, the cats mauled their horses, and the bears were just an all-around nuisance, so they killed them.
And than we had an era of sort of the birth of modern wildlife biology there in 1950s-90s where the game managers of the day didn't have to worry about predators, because they were all dead. So they beat the habitat drum, they weren't wrong.
Those biologists trained the biologists of today. Those biologists wrote the books of today.
The thing is, predators are back on the landscape. Yet it seems they still only want to beat the habitat drum. But I do think that's starting to change.