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Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

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Page 1: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Coyote(Canis latrans)

• Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg)

• tail posture dog vs. coyote

• highly variable behavior & diets

• most vocal canid

Page 2: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Coyote

• solitary or cooperative hunters

• mates may stay together for multiple years

• 1-19 pups (avg.=6) in dens

• female pups may stay with parents

• create “scent posts”

Page 3: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

• Native to Americas

• Change distribution over past 200 years

• Historic wolf control # of coyotes

• Potential effects on #s of snowshoe hares & bobcats

Page 4: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes)

• Largest fox (3-10 kg)

• Solitary, partly territorial

• HR size varies with habitat

• Nocturnal or crepuscular

Page 5: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

• Very adaptable – “urban foxes”

• Possibly not native to NA ??

Page 6: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes)

Page 7: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

• Monogamous

• Family dens + burrows

• 1-13 pups (avg. = 5)

• Sexually mature ~ 10 months

Page 8: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Color Variations

“Silver fox” – prized by furriers

“Cross fox”

Page 9: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Arctic Fox(Alopex lagopus)

• Smaller than red fox (3-8 kg)

• Adapted to arctic

•Varied diet (small mammals, eggs, carrion from polar bears)

Page 10: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

• Only in far north of NA

• Tundra in summer & ocean ice in winter

• Shorter dark pelage in summer

• Blue & white color phases

Page 11: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Arctic Fox(Alopex lagopus)

Circumpolar distribution

Page 12: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Arctic Fox

• monogamous

• 2 litters of 5-8 pups

• large, complex dens

• flexible social system – family territories

• may form communal bands that scavenge together

Page 13: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Grey Fox(Urocyon cinereoargenteus)

• smaller than red fox (3-7 kg)

• more omnivorous

• tree climbers

• woodlands & rocky areas (less agriculture than red fox)

Page 14: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Grey Fox

• Southern & Midwestern states

• timing of breeding varies w/latitude

• monogamous family units

• 1-7 pups (avg.=4)

Page 15: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Swift Fox(Vulpes velox)

• Smallest fox in NA (1-3kg)

• Occurs in south-central US

• Prairie grasslands & deserts

• speeds of 50 mph

Page 16: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid
Page 17: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid
Page 18: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Swift Fox(Vulpes velox)

• 2-6 pups per litter

• nocturnal

• Endangered

• #s declined in past 50 years

• Threats: predator & rodent control, habitat change

Page 19: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Kit Fox(Vulpes macrotis)

• Size of Swift fox (1-3 kg)

• Nocturnal – days in burrows

• Use multiple dens – switch frequently

• Diet: small mammals, birds, insects, some fruit

Page 20: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Gray Wolf(Canis lupus)

• largest canid (23-80 kg)

• color variation (white – black)

• diet varies geographically

• habitats: tundra, forest, prairie, desert, etc.

Page 21: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Gray Wolf

• territorial – aggressive defense by pack

• females sexually mature ~ 2 yr, males ~ 3 yr

• gestation ~ 2 mo.

• altricial pups born in den – 8 to10 wks

Page 22: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

•1973 -- lower 48 listed “Endangered” (except MN = “Threatened”)

•2003 -- 3 DPSs

Eastern - Threatened

Western - Threatened

Southwestern - Endangered

Page 23: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid
Page 24: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Red Wolf (Canis rufus)

Size: between coyote & gray wolf

(20-40 kg)

Color: brown, tan & black

• Red or tawny on muzzle, back of ears & legs

• Longer, pointed ears & longer legs; slender build; shorter fur (vs. gray wolf)

Page 25: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Red Wolf

Habitat: southeastern deciduous & coniferous forests

Diet: small mammals (raccoons, rodents, rabbits, muskrats, etc.) & white-tailed deer

Social structure: packs = extended families & defended territories

Page 26: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Red Wolf

• 1967 listed as Endangered under ESA

• 1970: < 100 survive in TX & LO

• Captive breeding & reintroduction

Page 27: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

Mexican Gray Wolf(Canis lupus baileyi)

• genetically distinct subspecies

Size: < northern gray wolf (~ red wolf, 20-36 kg)

Habitat: SW deserts; arid grasslands & shrublands

Diet: elk, deer, small mammals

Page 28: Coyote (Canis latrans) Largest of “small canids” (9–20 kg) tail posture dog vs. coyote highly variable behavior & diets most vocal canid

• extinct in native habitat by 1950s

• 1998: 11 wolves reintroduced to AZ & NM