Posted on 11/06/2015 2:01:29 PM PST by NYer
Wild canine hybrids lurk in our midst. (Photo:Â WikiCommons/Public Domain)
Have you heard any wolves howling in the northeast recently? Most likely not, since there arenât any of them left. But if you heard one 150 years ago, this is probably the English translation of her cries: âI have literally no dating options left in my species ⦠Any wolves out there? Anyone!âÂ
Nope.
Wolves in eastern North America, whose populations steadily dwindled due to deforestation and hunting, had no choice but to settle for coyotes. Interspecies dating is a wonderful thing, but for a wolf, the larger and handsomer of the two canines, a coyote is still a serious downgrade, even if some dog genes are thrown into the mix (lonely wolves have also been known to flirt with local dogs). The result of their circumstantial romance is a mesopredator weighing in at about 55 pounds (twice the weight of coyotes), with a genetic makeup around 8 percent dog, 8 percent wolf, and 88 percent coyote. Their hybrid offspringâknown as eastern coyotes, coywolves, or coywolfdogs if you want to be comprehensiveâare multiplying, and neighborhoods across the northeast are starting to notice.Â
In New York City alone, just within the past year, eastern coyotes have been spotted in Chelsea, Long Island City, Queens, the Upper West Side, and the Bronx. Theyâve taken to being nocturnal, and they can work their way through neighborhoods without causing trouble or even being noticed, a secret to their success. âTheyâre so, so sneaky that most people donât ever see them,â says Dr. Roland Kays of North Carolina State University. In fact, the creatureâs presence has become so commonplace that the NYC Department of Parks and Recreation has a guide called âLiving With Coyotes in New York City,â which includes âFive Easy Tips for Coexisting with Coyotes.â
Hey there, coywolfdog. (Photo: Dr. Roland Kays)Â
Dr. Bradley White at Trent University says that researchers believe the coywolf originated about a century ago in Ontario, Canada. Since then, coywolves have reoccupied the original territories of the eastern wolf and have even migrated on ice floes from Nova Scotia to Newfoundland, where theyâve developed a liking for moose and caribou. Meanwhile, the carnivores have infiltrated towns and cities along the eastern seaboard, and in areas where they can hunt in packs for larger prey like deer, they're growing larger and stronger. The coywolves found in cities like Toronto, where they prey on dogs, cats, or rodents, are still smaller, explains White.
Some scientists say that the eastern coyote may be the most adaptable animal on the planet. âItâs not only persisting but thriving,â says Kays.
Since its inception, the eastern coyote has established itself as a new top predator where wolves once reigned. They are heftier, faster, and have larger jaws than coyotes, and their songs are a blend of wolf howl and coyote yip. They eat discarded food, including fruits and vegetables, as well as available mammals. Theyâre opportunistic predators, meaning that theyâll take whatever they can get, another quality that makes them supremely adaptable to new environments. Theyâre smart, traveling by railroad track and looking both ways before crossing the highway. Rarely have we seen such a successful hybrid colonize such a large area.
A group of coywolves bred in captivity. (Photo:Â L. David Mech, Bruce W. Christensen, Cheryl S. Asa , Margaret Callahan, Julie K. Young/WikiCommons CC BY-SA 3.0)
The coywolfdog has taken an interesting evolutionary short cut. âHybridization seems to be a way that evolution can work very rapidly compared to what we traditionally think,â says Kays. As natural climates and habitats change at a rate faster than ever before, hybridization is a way for different species to keep up and adapt in order to survive. Kays points out that in the fish and plant worlds, hybridization is much easier, since thereâs no internal fertilization; organisms can throw their sex gametes into the wind or water and mix much more easily.
In general, though, hybridizationâwhich, to clarify, is not a new phenomenonâis almost certainly going to grow more and more common as speciesâ shrinking numbers make the single-and-looking-to-mingle more and more desperate.Â
Hybridization is a big concern in some areas, where atypical romantic choices can cause the original form of an animal to be lost, especially between wild and domestic species. For example, the Scottish wildcat is growing rarer as it increasingly hybridizes with domestic cats; a similar thing is happening with the Asian water buffalo and its domestic counterpart, as well as woodland and migratory caribou and southern and northern flying squirrels, whose habitats have newly overlapped.
Siblings or dating? (Photo: Nickton/WikiCommons CC BY 2.0)
It also brings up a contested scientific question: what exactly qualifies as a species?
There are over 20 different species concepts, explains White, and it depends on your definition. Kays doesnât like that the eastern coyote is being called a âcoywolfâ and labeled a new speciesâitâs not, he says. It would have to be substantially different from western coyotes and not share significant gene flow, which is the movement of individuals and their genetic material between populations. Neither of those are currently the case. âIs it evolving towards a new species, and going to be something totally different in 5,000 years? Maybe,â says Kays. But it's not there yet.
White says that while the eastern coyote is not isolated in terms of gene flow, thereâs no question that it is an entity, whether you want to call it a species or notâand whether you do comes down to whether youâre a splitter or a clumper. Do you want one group with a lot of diversity, or do you want to split it up into several different groups?Â
A coywolf looking coy. (Photo: www.ForestWander.com/WikiCommons CC BY-SA 3.0)
So what does the near future look like for the eastern coyote? Or, perhaps a more relevant question: what does it look like for city-dwellers from Chicago to Boston, D.C. to New York, anxious about wild canines wandering their streets at night?Â
âCoyotes are going to enforce the suggestion that birdwatchers have been asking for agesâto keep cats indoors,â says Kays. âThatâs really the biggest concern.â In some western areas, he says, coyotes have gotten bold, but that hasnât happened yet on the east coast. He explains that coyotes are naturally keen to avoid dangerous creatures, having had to watch out for bigger predators like wolves and cougars.
âIf they realize that humans are dangerous creatures, they will avoid us and reduce conflict,â says Kays. âIf not, they will move closer and closer, eat cats, dogs, and could potentially even start attacking small people.â Itâs important to make sure they maintain a healthy fear of humans, and that city-dwellers not begin feeding them. Other than that, âturns out thereâs not much we can actually do about it,â says Kays.
The only thing that can really reduce the number of coyotes in an area is adding wolves to keep them out. But that wonât work. Weâve run out of wolves, and the ones that remain have already starting shacking up with coyotes.
âI think the coyotes are here to stay,â says White. âNow itâs a matter of humans learning to adapt.â
The test of whether they’re truly “near” is whether they can interbreed. We know that wolves, dogs, and coyotes can.
In the other cases (except for the same animal with a different regional name) we often don’t know.
This explains something.
About a month ago I saw what looked like one of these - thought it was a wolf at first, did a double take - at the corner of Swan and River roads in Tucson.
Thought it was the best looking coyote I had ever seen with the reddish fur and sleek conformation - must have been all those good meals of well fed housecats in the Catalina foothills.
How does a 100% wolf mate with a 100% coyote and the pup only be 8% wolf?
Because it’s not first-generation.
Looks like there are some really nice pelts there. Open up trapping and let fur coats come back in vogue.
Yep. Even if you miss, they are less bold after that.
Coyotes out here do breed with dogs. About 18yrs ago we bred our two papered Cattle Dogs. We got a litter of six, two of which seemed pretty obviously coyote crosses. Bigger, lankier, pointed noses and coyote coloring.
They now interbreed here in Texas. I’ve seen plenty of them. Still see some plain coyotes also. Rarely see any wolves anymore.
Coyotes, being smaller and having larger litters, have a competitive advantage over wolves in many environments. It’s rather like the way forest environments evolve, with big hardwood trees’ being more sensitive to change, while faster-growing types that can bear a more varied climate flourish.
Possibly; very possible. Largest ‘yotes I’ve seen were in the Midwest but would not be surprised at all at what might turn up in Tucson.
So, if two 100% wolves mate the pup won’t be 100% wolf?
That must have been a surprize! Wolf/dog crosses have different temperament than dogs, I’d expect a dog/ coyote to be downright weird.
I wasn’t saying coyotes and dogs can’t cross, they can. I’m saying it has not been shown that the crosses survive to reproduce and maintain a genetic presence in the wild populations. The coyotes they used to make this hypothesis were a few bodies preserved in labs from road kill and trappers.
I don’t know if they can reproduce or not. Both were females but both were spayed. I kept one and another family member kept the other.
I had mine for 14years. I have never owned a dog who was so totally focused on me. She was not aggressive to anything, more like they just didn’t exist to her, dogs, cats, people. She did talk back to coyotes when she heard them. And was always where ever I was, unless it was when I was at work. Then she just hung out in the laundry room or backyard.
that was one damn scary book.
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