Eastern coyote

Eastern coyote
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Infraclass: Eutheria
Order: Carnivora
Family: Canidae
Genus: Canis
Species: C. latrans
Subspecies: C. latrans var.
Trinomial name
Canis latrans var.
Lawrence and Bossert, 1969[1]

The Eastern coyote (Canis latrans var.), also known as the New England canid or tweed wolf, is a wild North American canid of mixed wolf-coyote parentage present in New England, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,[2] Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick,[3] Nova Scotia,[4] and Newfoundland and Labrador.[5] It was first noticed during the early 1930s to the late 40s, and likely originated in the aftermath of the extirpation of the eastern wolf in the southeastern Ontario and the Labrador wolf in the eastern Canadian maritime provinces, thus allowing coyotes to colonize the former wolf ranges and mix with the remnant wolf populations.[6][7] This hybrid is smaller than the pure eastern wolf and holds smaller territories, but is in turn larger and holds more extensive home ranges than the typical western coyote.[6] Hybridization between the coyote and wolf was facilitated by the close relationship between the two species.

Description

Adult eastern coyotes are larger than western coyotes, weighing an average of 30-40 lbs, with female eastern coyotes weighing 21% more than male western coyotes.[6][8] Eastern coyotes also weigh more at birth; while newborn western coyotes weigh 250-300 grams, eastern coyotes weigh 349-360 grams. By the age of 35 days, eastern coyote pups average 1590 grams, 200 grams more than western coyotes of similar age. By this time, physical differences become more apparent, with eastern coyote pups having longer legs than their western counterparts. Differences in dental development also occur, with tooth eruption being later, and in a different order in the eastern coyote.[9] Aside from its size, the eastern coyote is physically not unlike the western coyote; both have erect ears, a straight and bushy tail, a conspicuous supracaudal gland and a narrow chest. There are four color phases, ranging from dark brown to blond or reddish blond, though the most common phase is gray-brown, with reddish legs, ears and flanks.[10] There are no significant differences between eastern and western coyotes in expressing aggression and fighting, though eastern coyotes tend to fight less, and are more playful. Unlike western coyote pups, in which fighting precedes play behavior, fighting among eastern coyote pups occurs after the onset of play.[9] Eastern coyotes tend to reach sexual maturity when they reach two years of age, much later than in western coyotes.[6]

Food

Skulls of a western coyote and an eastern coyote.

Eastern coyotes predate a variety of prey including mammals as small as a mouse and as large as moose; however, the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources lists their main prey items as rabbits, hares and deer in the winter and small mammals, wild berries, birds, amphibians and grasshoppers in the summer.[11]

Eastern coyotes are known as opportunistic omnivores and will prey on whatever is available and easy to scavenge or kill. The diet of the Eastern Coyote will shift and change with the seasons. Their diet can include, but is not limited to, feeding on insects, and berries during summer, to small mammals in the fall and throughout the winter. As winter becomes harder later in the season, larger game, such as the white-tailed deer, becomes a target for the coyote. Coyotes will hunt in pairs in many cases and can bring down a healthy, adult deer, however, deer killed by vehicles or by other natural causes are the more frequent target for the scavenging coyote. Researchers from the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry examined animal carcasses visited by radio-collared coyotes during the winter and summer of 2008-09. During the winter, only 8% of adult deer had been killed conclusively by coyotes. The remaining 92% were scavenged by coyotes after being killed by vehicles and other injuries. The adult deer that were killed by coyotes had severe preexisting injuries and were likely to die from other causes in the absence of coyote predation. In the spring the target for the coyote will shift to the newborn fawns as they are a much easier target for a coyote.[12][13][14][15]

Domestic dog introgression

Aside from the combinations of coyotes and eastern wolves making up most of the modern day eastern coyote's genepools, a study in 2013 by mammalian biologist Dr. Javier Monzón revealed that some of the coyotes in the northeastern USA also have mild influences of domestic dog (Canis lupus familiaris) and western Great Plains gray wolf (Canis lupus nubilus) in their genepool, suggesting that the eastern coyote is actually a four-in-one hybrid of coyotes, eastern wolves, western gray wolves, and dogs and that the hybrids living in areas with higher white-tailed deer density often have higher degrees of wolf genes than those living in urban environments. The addition of domestic dog genes is suspected to have played a minor role in facilitating the eastern hybrids' adaptability to survive in human developed areas.[16] The four-in-one hybrid theory was further explored in 2014 in which Monzón and his team had subsequently re-analyzed the tissue and SNP samples taken from 425 eastern coyotes to determine the degree of wolf and dog introgressions involved in each geographic range.[17] The team discovered that the domestic dog allele averages 10% of the eastern coyote's genepool while the eastern wolf and western gray wolf markers clustered into 26%. The remaining 64% matched mostly with coyotes. This analysis suggested that there may have been multiple swarms of genetic exchanges between the coyotes, feral dogs, and the other two distinct wolf populations present in the Great Lakes region.

References

  1. Lawrence, B. & Bossert, W. H. (1969). The cranial evidence for hybridization in New England Canis. Breviora 330, 1–13.
  2. "Greater than the sum of its parts". The Economist. October 31, 2015. Retrieved October 30, 2015.
  3. "Living with Wildlife - Eastern coyotes" (PDF). Natural Resources website. Government of New Brunswick. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  4. "Frequently Asked Questions about Eastern Coyote in Nova Scotia". Department of Natural Resources website. Government of Nova Scotia. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  5. "Living with Coyotes in Newfoundland and Labrador". The Department of Environment and Conservation website. Government of Newfoundland and Labrador. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Way, J.G., L. Rutledge, T. Wheeldon, B.N. White. 2010. Genetic characterization of Eastern "Coyotes" in eastern Massachusetts. Northeastern Naturalist. 17(2): 189-204.
  7. http://www.algonquinpark.on.ca/pdf/2009_wilson_S80-9_wolf_ontario.pdf
  8. Way, J. G. 2007. A comparison of body mass of Canis latrans (Coyotes) between eastern and western North America. Northeastern Naturalist 14(1): 111–24.
  9. 1 2 Bekoff, M. 1978. Behavioral Development in Coyotes and Eastern Coyotes. In: M. Bekoff, (ed.), Coyotes: Biology, Behavior, and Management: 97-124. Academic Press, New York
  10. Hilton, Henry. 1978. Systematics and Ecology of the Eastern Coyote. In: M. Bekoff, (ed.), Coyotes: Biology, Behavior, and Management: 210-28. Academic Press, New York
  11. CBC: Coyotes are moose killers, study finds
  12. http://www.dec.ny.gov/docs/wildlife_pdf/coystatnny91.pdf
  13. http://f.nanafiles.co.il/Upload3/82006/forummessageattachments/forummessagefile_1282800.pdf
  14. http://www.env.gov.nl.ca/env/wildlife/all_species/coyote2.jpg
  15. http://www.esf.edu/pubprog/brochure/coyote/coyote.htm
  16. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3899836/
  17. http://www.gothamcoyote.com/2014/01/its-coyote-wolf-dog-eat-dog-world.html

Further reading

External links

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