City Slinkers
Why are coyotes, those cunning denizens of the plains and rural west, moving into urban centers like Chicago and Washington DC?
- By Christine Dell'Amore
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2006, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
In Southern California, where coyotes have been living among people since the onset of urban sprawl after World War II, the animals have become more numerous in the past 20 years or so. There have been at least 160 attacks on people in the United States in the past 30 years, most in the Los Angeles County area. The majority were bites, often inflicted while people were protecting their pets. One coyote attack, on a 3-year-old girl playing in her front yard in Glendale in 1981, was fatal. Afterward, residents of the Los Angeles suburb started a campaign to educate people about not feeding coyotes or leaving pet food and garbage unsecured. That, plus an intensive trapping program in the neighborhood, cut down on the coyote population.
The coyote's affinity for life in the big city has surprised many researchers. But odder still is the coyote's propensity for breeding with wolves. Canine species within the genus Canis, which includes coyotes, wolves and domestic dogs, are capable of interbreeding, but they usually stick with their own kind. The "coywolf" hybrid is larger than a purebred coyote. It is found in northeastern Minnesota, southern Ontario and southern Quebec, Maine and New York. Researchers recently studied the genetic profiles of 100 coyotes killed by hunters in Maine. Of those animals, 23 had some wolf genes. Most crosses occur between male wolves and female coyotes. Some of the hybrids go on to mate with other hybrids, creating what one researcher calls a "hybrid swarm" that has the potential to evolve into a new species. Eastern coyotes are heftier than those in the West: one coyote in Maine tipped the scales at 68 pounds, a far cry from the slim 15-pounders in the Great Plains. Researchers don't know if the larger Eastern coyotes carry wolf genes or have independently evolved a larger size. Or they may just have a richer diet, with plenty of access to deer.
Should the urban coyote be viewed with trepidation? "Some people have fears that kids are going to be the next ones to be eaten," says Way. "I tell them coyotes have been at the edges of their neighborhoods for years." Way emphasizes coyotes can be an asset to urban ecosystems, keeping a check on deer, rodents, Canada geese and other animals that thrive on the suburbs' all-you-can-eat buffet.
At his office in Rock Creek Park, just out of range of the park's eerie coyote choruses, Ken Ferebee flips through photographs of the capital's coyotes, taken by a motion-sensitive camera installed in the park. He pauses at one arresting shot: two burly coyotes stare into the camera, heads tilted, yellow eyes glinting. Their expression and confident stance defy the stereotype of a cowardly varmint always running the other direction. These coyotes look curious, fearless and eager to explore the big city.
Christine Dell'Amore is a health reporter for United Press International.
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Comments (8)
@RKB - "What was the change ... ?"
Here's some factors that may be contributing :
1) Urban greenbelts (e.g. Golden Gate Park and the north-south blvds. like Sunset and Park Presidio);
2) Interstate highways and their associated roadkills;
3) The downward trend in ranching and hunting.
The last means there is less pressure from humans while the first two means a ready food source with few competitors.
Also, don't rule out the possibility of coyotes coming UP the San Francisco Peninsula. The center section of the peninsula is part nature reserve and part reservoir. Part of this is due to the San Andreas Fault running right underneath that big block of open space. Maybe someone should set out a salt lick and a web cam and see what shows up.
Posted by Ted K. on April 27,2010 | 12:24 PM
A coyote hopped on a MAX light rail train in Portland a few years back: http://onshuffle.files.wordpress.com/2009/05/coyote.jpg
Posted by Ray on April 27,2010 | 11:18 AM
They're in San Francisco too. Apparently they walked in from Marin a few years ago, and have made themselves comfortable... What was the change that allowed them come into cities all across the country?
Posted by RKB on April 21,2010 | 11:47 PM
"There have been at least 160 attacks on people in the United States in the past 30 years, most in the Los Angeles County area. The majority were bites, often inflicted while people were protecting their pets. One coyote attack, on a 3-year-old girl playing in her front yard in Glendale in 1981, was fatal."
That might sound like a lot, but it is minuscule compared to dog attacks. I would even say that it is irresponsible to print coyote attack statistics without comparing to dogs. Here are the statistics from dogbitelaw.com:
"The most recent official survey, conducted more than a decade ago, determined there were 4.7 million dog bite victims annually in the USA. A more recent study showed that 1,000 Americans per day are treated in emergency rooms as a result of dog bites. In 2007 there were 33 fatal dog attacks in the USA. Most of the victims who receive medical attention are children, half of whom are bitten in the face. Dog bite losses exceed $1 billion per year, with over $300 million paid by homeowners insurance."
Posted by Ryan on April 21,2010 | 04:16 PM
"I love wildlife, and I welcome the coyotes to eat as many domesticated cats as they can find" LOL. You have to remember that while they walk right by adult humans, when you have children of your own, you won't be so happy when one of them approaches your child (easy meal) in your own front yard.
Posted by Joe on April 21,2010 | 02:19 PM
I'm glad the urban coyotes are learning survival skills and teaching their young, to pass from generation to generation. I live in Southern California (Orange County), and the coyotes come out of the wildlife preserves and into the neighborhoods at night, seeking domestic cats and whatever else it can find (mice, rabbits - we have a lot of rabbits). They coyotes walk right by adult humans. I've seen them trot right by me and a group of friends before - we look at the coyote and it looks at us, but like a large domesticated dog, we exchange glances but it doesn't bother us and we don't bother it. I love wildlife, and I welcome the coyotes to eat as many domesticated cats as they can find. However, it saddens me when I see coyotes on the road, hit by cars. This article talks of how smart they are, yet where I live, they don't seem to understand roads (like birds and cats understand roads). Hopefully, they will learn. It's a shame for wildlife to perish because of being hit by a car. When humans are moving into their habitat, they need every member of their population as possible. I hope they learn soon and teach their young.
Posted by Roger on April 18,2010 | 04:25 AM
Then why can't they ever catch the Road Runner?
Posted by Linda on April 17,2010 | 07:40 PM
excellent article,
it amazes me - spain have their wild cats, russia has underground dogs? all a testament to the effect us lot have had on native species, and the way they adapt.
Posted by newman on April 17,2010 | 03:02 AM