An obvious follow-on to yesterday’s post.
We all know about how wolves habituated themselves to human all those thousand of years ago but the same is happening to coyotes today.
There was an article on EarthSky on March 28th, 2019 that I want to share with you, and here it is:
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How coyote pups get used to humans
Posted by Eleanor Imster in EARTH | HUMAN WORLD | March 28, 2019
Across North America, coyotes are moving into urban environments. While human residents are having to get used to the new animal neighbors, coyotes are also habituating to people.
As coyotes are moving into urban environments across North America, many human residents – whether they like it or not – are having to get used to them. Meanwhile, how are coyotes habituating to people?
A new study, published December 2018 in the peer-reviewed journal Ecology and Evolution, suggests that coyotes can habituate to humans quickly and that habituated parents pass this fearlessness on to their offspring.
Until the 20th century, coyotes lived mostly in the U.S. Great Plains. But when wolves were hunted almost to extinction in the early 1900s, coyotes lost their major predator, and their range began to expand.
With continuing landscape changes, coyotes are now increasingly making their way into suburban and urban environments — including New York City, Los Angeles and cities in the Pacific Northwest — where they live, mainly off rodents and small mammals, without fear of hunters.
The aim of the new study, was to understand how a skittish, rural coyote can sometimes transform into a bold, urban one — a shift that can exacerbate negative interactions among humans and coyotes. University of Washington biologist Christopher Schell is the first author of the study, Schell said in a statement:
Instead of asking, ‘Does this pattern exist?’ we’re now asking, ‘How does this pattern emerge?’.
A key factor, the researchers suggest, might be parental influence. Coyotes pair for life, and both parents contribute equally to raising the offspring. This may be because of the major parental investment required to raise coyote pups, and the evolutionary pressure to guard them from larger carnivores.
The new study observed eight coyote families at the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Predator Research Facility in Utah during their first and second breeding seasons. These coyotes are raised in a fairly wild setting, with minimal human contact and food scattered across large enclosures.
But during the experiment researchers occasionally placed all the food near the entrance of the enclosure and had a human researcher sit just outside, watching any approaching coyotes, from five weeks to 15 weeks after the birth of the litter. Then they documented how soon the coyotes would venture toward the food. Schell said:
For the first season, there were certain individuals that were bolder than others, but on the whole they were pretty wary, and their puppies followed. But when we came back and did the same experiment with the second litter, the adults would immediately eat the food – they wouldn’t even wait for us to leave the pen in some instances.
Parents became way more fearless, and in the second litter, so, too, were the puppies.
In fact, the most cautious pup from the second-year litter ventured out more than the boldest pup from the first-year litter. Schell said:
The discovery that this habituation happens in only two to three years has been corroborated, anecdotally, by evidence from wild sites across the nation. We found that parental effect plays a major role.
He added:
Even if it’s only 0.001 percent of the time, when a coyote threatens or attacks a person or a pet, it’s national news, and wildlife management gets called in. We want to understand the mechanisms that contribute to habituation and fearlessness, to prevent these situations from occurring.
Bottom line: A new study suggests coyotes puppies learn from their parents how to habituate to humans.
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I love the fact that coyotes pair for life and take an equal measure of responsibility in bringing up their pups.
Once again, we humans can learn from our natural cousins.
When I lived in California, I had a German Shepherd/Coyote mix named Cody. She was adorable & howled rather than barked. I think of her often.
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I presume, Susan, that she died peacefully of old age but dear Cody does sound like a very special dog. My, how we miss our dear, departed friends.
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Yes, she was a special girl.
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Coyotes are a resilient and widely persecuted animal as well. Here’s a post I did on the coyote about a year ago. https://jimoeba.wordpress.com/2018/08/05/the-incredible-coyote-and-christian-moralty/
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Jim, I would very much like to republish that post. May I have your permission?
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Certainly Paul.
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Thanks!
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Wooftastic post🐾
Thank you for sharing this 🐾
💜nose nudges💜
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My great pleasure!
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💜nose nudges💜
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Fascinating study on a fascinating species. Well done.
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Yes, it was most interesting. I didn’t realise that coyotes pass on their fearlessness to their offspring.
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I know–very fascinating research.
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