|
Winter 2001

By
Chris Hardman
The
North American coyote has long been a symbol of the wilderness.
Snout pointed toward the evening sky with a full moon at
his back, the coyote reminds us of what is truly wild in
this country. Or does it? These days, the coyote can be
found anywhere in Chicago Wilderness from the bustling
streets of Chicago to cultivated suburban neighborhoods
to the natural wilds.

Coyotes'
sharp teeth are a threat to cats and small dogs, but these
predators are helping restore balance in our wildlands.
Photo by Lynn M. Stone.
Coyotes
were roaming Chicago Wilderness forests and prairies long
before Europeans immigrated here in the 1800s. Journals
kept by early explorers indicate that coyotes were abundant
in Illinois in the 1800s but their populations declined
dramatically in the latter part of the century. It wasnt
until almost 100 years later that their numbers increased,
starting in west-central Illinois in the early 1970s and
moving to the northeastern part of the state in the late
1970s and early 1980s. According to Mammals of Illinois,
written by Donald F. Hoffmeister, there were between 20,000
and 30,000 coyotes living in Illinois by the mid-1980s.
| |

Coyote
pups emerge from their den at Midewin National Tallgrass
Prairie. Photo by Brad Semel, courtesy of Illinois
Department of Natural Resources.
|
The
key to the coyote's survival is the animal's amazingly adaptable
personality. The coyote can live in the most remote regions
of the country or survive well inside our largest cities.
In this region, coyotes are most common in forest preserves
with a good mix of grassland and open woods, but they also
live in cemeteries, local parks, and even at O'Hare Airport.
Chicago
residents were taken by surprise in March of 1999 when the
Chicago Tribune publicized the capture of a coyote that
was hiding under a taxi on Michigan Avenue. That was no
surprise to Chris Anchor, a wildlife biologist with the
Forest Preserve District of Cook County charged with capturing
and releasing the urban coyote. According to his studies,
all coyote habitat in Cook County is occupied and spoken
for. The coyotes have been living among us for several decades.
"One
of the reasons they have been so successful is that they
are rather plastic in their feeding habits, are opportunistic,
and take advantage of a wide variety of food sources,"
says Frank Drummond, a wildlife biologist for the Lake County
Forest Preserves. Coyotes can survive on any type of food.
Although their preference is rodents, voles, and mice, they
can also eat insects, grasshoppers, beetles, grubs, snakes,
lizards, and frogs. In cities they hunt rats and house cats,
scavenge from garbage cans and dumpsters, and dine on road
kill.
Wiley
Buck, now working for the Minnesota Department of Natural
Resources, examined for his Masters thesis what coyotes
were eating in the suburbs. Focusing on Cook, Lake, McHenry,
Will, and DuPage counties, Buck studied coyote scat to determine
suburban coyote diet. "The very interesting thing is
that we found very little human-related food: garbage or
pets," he says. "In other urban areas like San
Diego and Los Angeles, where the diets have been studied,
they depend a lot on cats and garbage-picking to make a
living, but the ones in Chicago Wilderness are being pretty
traditional and eating wild food." The majority of
the coyotes diet was made up of rabbit and deer.
Ironically,
widespread development throughout the Chicago Wilderness
area has resulted in more food for the coyote. Most forest
preserves were a mix of agricultural fields and woodlots
before they became conservation land. The mosaic of woods
and grasslands that results provides ideal habitat for the
small mammals coyotes love to eat. As prey populations have
exploded, coyotes have found an abundant and easy food source.
Although
the Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR) reports
that the coyote population has been stable since the 1980s,
more people throughout the Chicago Wilderness region are
reporting more coyote sightings and coyote-human interactions
than ever before. IDNR Biologist Bob Bluett suggests that
the reason people encounter coyotes more often is not because
there are more coyotes, but because the coyotes are allowing
themselves to be seen.
"I
think what youre seeing are the effects of evolution
of behavior," says Bluett. "When that population
increase was going on in the 70s, you had animals
coming into residential areas under dire circumstances onlydeep
snow, cold temperatures. Over several generations that tendency
to be afraid of people and be very elusive has given way
...to animals that just take people for granted."
Chris
Anchor points out that coyotes feel quite safe in well-populated
areas where hunting is not allowed. "Coyotes, in general,
in Cook County are not legally hunted or trapped so theyve
lost a lot of their natural fear of humans," he explains.
"In this area coyotes view people neutrally. We get
a lot of reports of coyotes hunting in neighborhoods in
the middle of the day, walking through picnic groves while
picnics are going on right in front of people."
Wildlife
biologists are confident that even as coyotes get bolder,
by following certain rules, humans can co-exist with coyotes
peacefully and enjoy sharing the land with this clever and
beautiful animal. The number one rule is to never feed coyotes.
"The only documented cases of [coyotes] attacking humans
have occurred in areas where people feed them, and they
all occurred in people that were age five and younger,"
says Anchor. "So its imperative that people do
not begin to feed coyotes."
Feeding
coyotes completely breaks down their natural fear of humans
and can cause them to become unusually aggressive. Especially
in residential neighborhoods with young children, the results
of well-intentioned feeding could be tragic. In order to
prevent coyotes from viewing humans as a food source at
all, experts recommend securing garbage cans so coyotes
dont become regular visitors scavenging for scraps
in the back yard. Bringing in dog or cat food and water
in the evening also eliminates a potential coyote food source.
Although coyotes can pose a threat to small cats and dogs,
a simple solution is to keep dogs on leashes and bring cats
in at night.
As
with any wild animal, the best way to enjoy coyotes is from
a distance. As long as humans do not threaten them or their
pups, coyotes will be the first to run away during a typical
coyote-human encounter. According to IDNR statistics, only
16 cases of coyotes attacking humans have been documented
in a 30-year period. "Whenever Ive handled the
animals in the traps, they are very docile and just kind
of lie there and let you work on them and put on the collar
and take the blood samples," says IDNR Natural Heritage
Biologist Brad Semel. "Id rather work with a
coyote than a raccoon."
According
to Illinois biologists, the effect coyotes have had on other
native wildlife varies from species to species. They note
that red foxes have lost territory to coyotes. "The
foxes are getting pushed back into different areas. We are
getting calls about foxes in subdivisions and under trailers.
I think these foxes are trying to find little niches where
the coyotes arent because where the two of them come
into contact, the coyotes are actually killing the foxes,"
explains Semel. "I had radio collars on two foxes that
were killed by coyotes. They dont eat them. They just
seem to eliminate them from the range of competition."
The gray fox seems to fare much better because they are
able to escape coyotes by climbing trees.
Deer
are affected by coyotes in a different way. Adult deer are
rarely a source of coyote food in the Chicago Wilderness
area. Because Illinois coyotes dont live in large
packs, they are less apt to attempt the takedown of a large
mammal like a deer. They do feed on fawns and on road-killed
deer. A recent study by John Oldenburg, Manager of Grounds
and Natural Resources, and his colleagues at the DuPage
County Forest Preserve District shows that newborn fawns
are definitely an important food source for coyotes in their
area.
Of
129 samples of coyote scat they collected between late March
through mid-June of 2000, 21.7 percent contained white-tailed
deer. By identifying the size of bone remnants, the researchers
were able to determine that the remains belonged to newborn
fawns. "What this suggests is that predation probably
plays a greater role than we were originally thinking,"
says Oldenburg. "If we can have any natural predation
going on to help us manage deer that would be a great benefit."
This new information is now being used in DuPage Countys
computer model to help predict deer population and determine
harvest numbers.
Coyotes
are great communicators. Scientists have identified at least
11 different kinds of vocalizations such as lone howls,
group howls, group yipping, and barks. Coyotes use their
voices to establish territory, signal a warning, indicate
location, and send greetings. Brad Woodson, restoration
ecologist for the McHenry County Conservation District,
says that campers enjoy hearing coyotes in the evening.
"I think thats a neat thing that adds to the
camping experience," he says.
Coyotes
also use facial expressions and body positions to communicate
with each other. For example, grimaces can indicate aggressive
feelings. A complex communication structure is imperative
for animals used to living as a community; because coyotes
normally live in packs, they need to be able to communicate
with each other to avoid fights or misunderstandings. In
the Chicago Wilderness area, coyotes live alone, in pairs,
or in temporary family groups.
Like
other canines, coyotes are very territorial. They mark their
territory with urine or scat and warn off any interlopers
with aggressive displays. Most territories are already spoken
for, which explains the presence of coyotes in the more
populated areas. "We did some work with coyotes that
came out of city of Chicago," explains Chris Anchor.
"We radio-collared them and let them go. Basically
what every single coyote tried to do was get back to where
they came from. We would take them to the most extreme areas
of the county where they had every opportunity to stay away
from people if they chose to, and every single animal chose
to try and get back to where they came from."
Coyote
parents are good parents. Both take responsibility for protecting
the pups, feeding them, and teaching them how to be a coyote.
During the first week of life, the pups are blind and helpless,
and the mother rarely leaves the den. A few weeks later
the pups will take their first tentative steps out of the
den and begin to explore their surroundings. The next two
months are spent learning what to eat, how to howl, and
how to spot predators. With the arrival of the fall, the
pups usually venture out on their own.
Built
into the coyotes survival strategy is the natural
tendency to be suspicious of anything or anyone new. The
coyote knows every inch of his territory and will immediately
notice a new presence. When young pups are around, a coyote
mother can easily be spooked into moving her pups into a
new den if she senses something out of place in her territory.
Their suspicious nature keeps them out of sight when human
visitors arrive, making seeing a coyote a rare treat. Actually
more people have seen coyotes than they realize. Because
coyotes look so much like domestic dogs with the
coloring and build of a German Shepherd they have
been able to travel through populated areas in a sort of
disguise.
Unfortunately,
coyotes have a sad history with humans. They are one of
the most persecuted animals in North America. In 1931, the
U.S. government began a campaign of coyote extermination
under a department titled Animal Damage Control (recently
the name was changed to Wildlife Services). Each year hundreds
of thousands of coyotes are legally killed. Ranchers in
the West hold a particularly strong hatred for the coyote,
blaming them for the loss of livestock. The canines are
labeled problem animals and are trapped, shot, and poisoned.
As
more people come into contact with this beautiful and wild
animal, perhaps fear will turn into respect. Biologists
remind us of the important role coyotes play in the environment.
They help to control rodent populations. They keep in balance
the numbers of mid-sized predators. Without coyotes, elevated
numbers of foxes, raccoons, and opossums actually eliminate
many bird species.
"Its
always good when you see them," says Brad Semel, "because
you know that there is still part of the real wild Illinois
left. It certainly would be nice to see some of other creatures
they used to co-habitate with, like the elk and bison, and
think about what this place looked like 100 years ago."
Writer
Chris Hardman is occasionally awakened by the howls and
yips of coyotes on her property.
|