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Coyotes— They’re Turning Up Everywhere These Days
Posted on Friday, June 29, 2012 by eNature
Coyote
Coyote
© Rebecca Richardson
Red Fox
Red Fox
© USFWS

People curse them, trap them, even shoot them, but Coyotes continue to thrive.

In fact, their range has expanded greatly in the last fifty years. Whereas people once encountered Coyotes only in Canada and the American West, now these carnivores can be found across the East Coast of the United States as well, from Maine down to South Carolina.  They’ve even been spotted in the heart of New York City and Washington DC.

But who are these new arrivals? And is their presence reason for concern?

Experts believe that the spread of Coyotes across the continent has been southward, from Canada, rather than eastward, from the West, with the largest numbers moving into new territories within the last several decades. Three factors have drawn Coyotes to these regions: an absence of natural predators, abundant habitat and prey, and wildlife regulations generally favorable to the animal’s survival.

It also helps that Coyotes are extremely adaptable. They prefer to live in open plains and prairies, but since such land is scarce in the East, they’ve settled into brushy areas instead, as well as fields, marshes, and at the edges of deciduous woodlands. The home territory of a single Coyote can measure up to five miles in diameter, and though Coyotes sometimes travel with their mates or with an extended family group, most often they’re seen alone.

At first glance, a Coyote looks a lot like a Red Fox. Their size and coloration are about the same. The most obvious difference between these two animals lies in their tails. The tip of a Coyote’s tail is dark, while a Red Fox has a white-tipped tail. Also, a Coyote runs with its tail down, and a fox runs with its tail pointing straight out behind it. Another distinction is in their calls: both yip, but the Coyote quite often emits a series of barks and howls prior to its yipping calls.

As noted, Coyotes eat meat. Rabbits, hares, and White-tailed Deer carrion make up the bulk of an Eastern Coyote’s diet, but there are many other items on its menu, including the occasional family pet and one or a few watermelons from a garden patch. Coyotes are not shy around houses, and their curiosity and predatory instincts occasionally lead to trouble with humans.

For the record, Coyotes very rarely bite people, and when they do it’s usually because they’ve been induced into feeding from the hand. Yes, they raid garbage cans and gardens and have been known to kill cats and small dogs, but overall they’re not a negative addition to the landscape. The best strategy for dealing with them is to fence off sensitive areas and keep pets inside at night, when Coyotes are most active.

Have you encountered a coyote in a place where you didn’t expect to see one?

Share your stories below— we’d love to hear them!

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Comments

I am in California and live in a rural area where we have ALWAYS had coyotes.  We have also always had cats but they all came in at night and did not wander off when out ... except one ... and a coyote did get him during daylight hours as he sneaked out of the fenced area to go on an adventure.  The other cat we had then would never go to that back area of the property and never out of view of the patio.  The cat we have now is STRICTLY indoor.  And happy and safe.

Posted by Eileen Walker on 7/3

Here in the northnern side of the San Gabriel mountains straddling the edge of the Los Angeles and San Bernardino county lines looking down on the Victor and Antelope Valleys of the southernwestern Mojave desert, we see coyotes about 2 times or more a week. They ‘hide in plain sight,’ acting as casual and at home as a dog on our unfenced acres during the day, and are usually alone. At night we hear their calls all around us, with groups of 5 to 15 I would guesstimate. I like our Mojave wildlife very much, but would never feed the coyotes directly. Indirectly I feed them by fattening up all the quail, cottontails, and jackrabbits. They just have to catch the ‘fast food’ for themselves.

Posted by Drew Engman on 7/3

I often see coyotes on my hikes in the regional parks in the San Francisco Bay Area. They’re quite bold. Cats are ill-advised to wander around these hills, night OR day.

Posted by Gerald on 7/3

Our property backs up to an equestrian trail and bike trail running along highway 33 (it is a two lane road and calling it Highway 33 at this section is a bit pretentious ... but it is and it veers off up the mountains just a little way from here).  In any event, go out in the early morning to turn a horse out into the arena and you would agree ... it is NOT merely an equestrian trail .. it is a coyote trail (and the road in front of our house has on a few occasions been a bear trail).  We used to have lots of raccoons and possum.  Haven’t seen any in a couple of years.  Hmmmm .. wonder why.

Posted by Eileen Walker on 7/3

People in South Carolina are into killing coyotes. They seem to think it is open season on them. I think reports on coyotes here are exaggerated.

Posted by Trey on 7/4

We have them in CT and I dread them. They stealthily move through neighborhoods stealing cats, small dogs. Their cry is unearthly when moving through in packs.
I’m all for an explosion of coyote fur on winter jackets.

Posted by Jennifer on 7/4

We live in the suburbs of Lansing Michigan, and have seen coyotes in our neighborhood 3 or 4 times in the 19 years we’ve lived here. There is usually a welcome drop in the rabbit population around the time of each sighting. I don’t know of any missing pets even though there are a lot of cats wandering around at night.

Posted by joanne on 7/4

The coyotes don’t bother me.  After all, they were here first.  I just look out for my pets and enjoy the wild life on the side.  The one I have to admit I did NOT enjoy was the day I went out early and saw a big dog at the end of the driveway ... and then realized the big dog was a smallish bear.  I called animal control and they came and tracked it to the school yard two blocks away, tranquilized it and hauled it back to the hills.

Posted by Eileen Walker on 7/4

Yes, these critters are in S.E. Iowa, we have a small acreage north of Burlington, and we hear them howling at night, have not seen them though. Have found numerous carcass about, of small deer. I assume the coyotes are feeding.

Posted by Jim on 7/4

I have seen a coyote in my Delaware County neighborhood a few times so far. Once toting a rabbit in its mouth. People think I am crazy but I know it was not a dog.They call it the ‘Clifton Heights Coyote” I have been told. Unit it bothers me I will let it do what it wants unless it raids my garden . Then it will be a target for my crossbow.

Posted by Frank B. on 7/5

I live on the “Ridge” of Central Florida in Lake County and have seen coyotes several times coming across fields that were once orange groves.  My husband’s children live in a more populated area next to a golf course and have lost several cats to coyotes.

Posted by Alice S Hoelzer-Hawthorne on 7/6

Here in Vermont, coyotes are loathed by dairy farmers because they prey on newborn calves… Though WHY the farmers don’t bring their cows into the barn when the calf is due is one of those questions that someone from “away,” like me, doesn’t ask.

Coyotes can carry rabies, though that seems to be very rare. A young woman hiking in Atlantic Canada was killed by a pair of coyotes last year, but attacks on humans, too, seem to be very rare.

Nonetheless, hiking in the woods when a pack of coyotes starts howling and yipping nearby is a pretty nerve-wracking experience!

Posted by Mark West on 7/6

I live in northern Indiana. It is a rural area with woods,water and lots of farm fields,growing wheat,corn or soybeans. We have a large number of coyotes here and enjoy hearing them howl, then yip as they set out on their nightly rounds. No dogs have turned up missing on those nights,while many of our neighbors have their dogs tied up outside! Our dogs are small and when they go out at night we are with them. We also have chickens in a pen that could easily be entered by the clever coyotes. We have encountered them on our property however,they have never been a bother.

Posted by Linda Gillespie on 7/6

We live in the rural Vargas Plateau above the East Bay region of San Francisco.  Packs of coyotes abound here and do a great job of keeping down the feral cat population.  I do wish they would work a little harder on the wild turkey population.  We are inundated!

Posted by Bonnie on 7/6

This article has a couple inaccuracies. First of all the coyote is a bit larger than the red fox, not by much but you can tell a distinction from the size as well as the other differences pointed out. I know because I’ve seen both animals in Maryland. Second, the coyote is now present on the east coast all the way into Florida. I know because I most definitely just saw one in Volusia County, while driving from Daytona Beach to New Smyrna beach early one evening. Coyotes are heard much more often than they are seen.

Posted by Joe on 7/10

We are in NW CT spring through fall and as of a few weeks ago, hear coyotes almost every night.  At first we were on edge and uncomfortable but got over that.  The small flock of free range Bantams are secured after they go in at 8 and our German Shepherd lies out by their usual late afternoon dustbath area until they are closed in.  We had two hens with a single peep each and kept them in dog travel cases at night until one box was carried off.  It got caught against a shrub but not opened. I tied them down and have had no trouble.  We wonder if the coyotes will tire of our area once they realize that they are not getting a treat to eat from our flock.

Posted by Arlene Charest on 7/12

I ride at night in a lit arena in San Marcos, California (Northern San Diego county).  There are coyotes almost every night.  They seem to find me and my horse interesting.  We were riding one night and three of them sat and watched us for 3-4 minutes before moving on. So far, we havent lost any pets but the barn cats are extremely aware of them….  fearful to the core….

Posted by Kainai on 7/14

I live in southeastern Alabama out about 10 miles from town. We moved here about 4 years ago and that’s when I had my first encounters with coyotes. Their yipping used to wake me up at night and send cold chills down my spine. I don’t want to kill them all, but I also don’t want them eating my cats or attacking my dog. We had a lot of armadillos for a while and that’s when we heard coyotes the most. Lately, no more armadillos and seemingly, no more coyotes. Haven’t heard them in a long time. I always heard coyotes were the only predator that could easily kill an armadillo and that coyotes followed armadillos here from out west. The closest town has a problem with coyotes. They don’t just live out in the country.

Posted by Amanda on 7/16

I can relate to Kainai ... here in the Ojai Valley our horse arena is adjacent to (and fenced by chain link fencing) a bridle path and bike trail that go through the valley.  It has been a coyote passage for years ... long before it was formally dedicated ... and we have entertained many types of “critters” going by over the years.  Keeps life interesting ... and kitties INDOORS !!!

Posted by Eileen Walker on 7/16

“They’re Turning Up Everywhere These Days” is a good to know at this time. Really i was looking forward to read about it. Thanks for this allocation. LOL

mobile security system

Posted by Any Rina on 7/17

Keep your cats inside - that’s where they should be anyway.  As far as the coyotes, raccoons, groundhogs and everything else that was here before us, let things live - must we wipe out everything?  One day, all we’ll have is wild animals in zoo’s or stuffed in museums for our ancestors to see.

Posted by Anne on 7/20

I’m sure most people have heard about this story a couple of years ago, but here in Chicago there was a coyote that walked into a 7/11 right downtown.

Also of interest, now that wolves are moving back into areas of the Great Lakes, the coyote populations are starting to shrink back.

Posted by Mike on 7/20

I had a grey fox coming each night to my house looking for food so I began to feed him.  A week later a coyote showed up at the food bowl. It would come every night so I figured I knew where it was staying in a shallow cave behind my house.  I approached, shotgun in hand just in case, and I heard it make sounds in the cave so I left.  Every night (I think it is a female with pups) it comes.  We have had extremely dry and hot weather so I felt I should help her out.  I have been feeding her a bowl of Purina One topped with veinna sausages or ham slices and also a bowl of 2 percent milk.  I place the food out after dark and whistle and leave. In few minutes I see her out the patio doors feeding but it seems very wary about approaching closer.  Cant kill the thing it is just too much like a dog.  I have no intention of trying to tame it but now I am committed as long as she chooses to stay.  She eats as much as my 5 dogs combined.

Posted by Ralph Key on 7/20

I am in a suburb 15 minutes north of Boston and have fox, coyotes, hawks, raccoons, and fishers-all working the perimeter of my chicken coop.  I make sure the hens are locked up at night and the cats too.  Lost a cat in CA to a coyote and it is a crappy way to die.  I wish people would not feed them=they should not get used to being near people.  The person who just posted about “helping them out’ seems to forget they are wild animals.  I respect them, like to watch them and have a healthy fear of them being too close!

Posted by Demetra on 7/20

I have to agree with Demetria.  It is wonderful to watch the wild animals but we must remember what they are.  Let them run wild and keep our wild land safe ... but that’s where the wild creatures belong and it is really amazing how self sufficient they really are.  Look how the populations are increasing !

Posted by Eileen Walker on 7/20

Yes, Ralph, not a good idea to feed the wildlife.  It makes them dependent on humans and that draws them closer to humans.  THAT is always a dangerous thing for both parties.  They will find their own food, they really don’t need supplements.  Nature will take care of things.  I’d wean them off and let them fend for themselves.  Hopefully they won’t get aggressive with you or your homestead and they’ll do what they were born to do - hunt and forage.  There is a reason for the “Don’t feed the animals” signs!  It only hurts them.

Posted by Anne on 7/20

I was surprised to see a gray animal crossing the road going over the hill side in WV.  I am sure it was a coyote.  It was a dirty gray.  It is my understanding that the state brought them into the state.  We are seeing more and more bears in our area also.  Recently,  I had seen what I know to be a mountain lion also.  I am glad to see more wild life.  The state booklet once had an article “we don’t fence deer tracks anymore”.  Deer was so scarce that persons who found a deer track on his farm would put a fence around it so he could show other people he had a deer on his farm.  Now,  I think we kill more deer on the road than we do hunting.

Posted by sherman on 7/20

As a former NYC resident, I Have seen Coyotes within 2 miles of Yankee stadium. I now live in East alabama and I see them on a regular basis and in Packs.

Posted by Jose on 7/22

I live in Dallas, Texas on a busy residential street about a mile north of White Rock Lake Park and creek. Occasionally a lone coyote has been seen trotting down our street in the early morning hours. At night one can sometimes hear them yipping in the creek bottoms. Unfortunately we did lose a large neutered male cat to what the vet felt was a coyote attack. All of our pets are now kept indoors including our ninety pound German Shepherd. Although I feel that no lone coyote in its right mind would attack her. However a pack might.

Posted by Bick Eubanks on 7/24

Please do not under estimate coyotes.  A small pack or family unit lured our 185 pound livestock guard dog out into the woods and then proceeded to try to wear him down for a kill in a group of trees.  We rescued him a few minutes from teh attack and surely death so watch your cats and ALL dogs.

Posted by Madeline on 7/24

Recently my husband and I went to Alaska. While talking with year round residents, we were surprised to learn that since the invasion of coyotes from Canada some years ago,rabies entered with them and is endangered the wildlife. Rabies was unheard of prior to this…

Posted by Kerry Considine on 7/25

Though the article states coyotes inhabit the East Coast down to South Carolina, I can absolutely confirm their presence in Georgia and Florida as well.

Posted by Kelly Marcilliat on 7/26
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