Archive for the ‘Coyotes’ Category

Coyotes stalk dog and owner near bluffs

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

A Scarborough woman recounted yesterday how she and her chocolate Labrador retriever were stalked by two coyotes as they walked along a wooded trail near the Scarborough Bluffs.

Patricia Hornyak said the coyotes attacked her dog, Choco, on Sunday morning and continued to stalk them even after she scared them off with a stick.

“They were following us and not very far behind,” she said yesterday. “I got a stick and just turned and yelled at them, and they scurried off. But the rest of the way out I could sense them. He did too, he kept looking out into the bush.”

Nathalie Karvonen, executive director of the Toronto Wildlife Centre, said the coyotes may have been protecting their territory, rather than looking for a meal.

“Coyotes are interested in little dogs allowed to run off leash because little dogs, to a coyote, are no different than a rabbit or a groundhog. They are not targeting them to be mean, it’s just they are the right size to be food for a coyote,” Ms. Karvonen said.

“Larger dogs tend to be more territorial. If a larger dog is being walked in an area where coyotes live, especially if it is breeding season, the coyote may be very interested in that dog for the safety of its own young or its den.”

The incident was reminiscent of a series of sightings last winter, when a coyote was spotted in the nearby Beaches area several times, attacking a couple of smaller dogs and killing one Chihuahua.

Ms. Hornyak said the city’s animal services department visited her on Sunday, dropping off a pamphlet that suggested residents keep an eye on their children and animals.

“I don’t agree with them that we have to cohabitate with them if they get to the point where they are attacking dogs,” Ms. Hornyak said.

“I think when they start to get close to your pets or maybe your kids, although I haven’t heard that happen, I don’t think it’s a good idea they be left alone.”

She said the coyotes had simply appeared on Sunday and started nipping at the much-larger Choco. Ms. Hornyak said Choco was bitten in the legs and ears, but the wounds were superficial.

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Coyotes Invade Urban Areas Across North America

Friday, January 15th, 2010

Once Found Only in the Southwest, Coyotes Have Expanded their Range

The coyote is clever and adapts so well to new habitats that it has spread right across much of North America. Now it is becoming dangerously used to humans.

Native people call the coyote (Canis latrans) the Trickster. There are many legends about the cleverness of Coyote and how he can fool others to get what he wants.

In areas where coyotes have become bold and overly familiar with humans, farmers are losing sheep and poultry to these opportunistic hunters. Now city dwellers in eastern Canada and the United States are discovering that the coyote’s reputation is well earned. Some are paying the price, as coyotes will not hesitate to attack and kill small pets.

The October 27, 2009, mauling of singer Taylor Mitchell by a pair of eastern coyotes in Cape Breton Highlands National Park in Nova Scotia was the first-ever fatal attack by coyotes on an adult human, and only the second fatality ever recorded. It may be a sign that coyotes, especially the larger eastern variety, are losing their fear of humans.

If so, that does not bode well for the Trickster. When predators start competing with people, humans usually win.

Coyotes Fill a Vacuum in the Ecosystem

Ironically, humans have brought this on themselves. By nearly eradicating other predators such as eagles, wolves, cougars and lynx from much of eastern North America, people paved the way for the coyote to move right in and make himself at home. With no large predators to keep them out, coyotes found an empty niche and promptly filled it, rather like an unwanted guest who moves into one’s unused spare bedroom and refuses to leave.

In the east, the problem is more serious simply because of the size of the coyotes. The average weight of a coyote in its native western habitat is about 20 to 30 pounds. But as coyotes gradually moved into the eastern United States and Ontario, they began mating with brush wolves, Eastern Canadian wolves (Canis lycaon) and possibly dogs. As it kept moving eastward, the now-hybridized coyote began to increase in size and weight.

The coyotes found in Canada’s Maritime provinces carry the DNA of these larger cousins, and they are big. Generally, the males average 40 pounds, although there are reports of considerably larger ones. Western coyotes typically eat mice, rabbits and other small game, and are unlikely to kill an adult person; they are simply too small. But tragically, the hybrid eastern coyote has proven it is quite capable of doing so.

Coyotes Becoming Bolder

Normally, coyotes are shy animals, like wolves, but once they move into populated areas in search of easy prey like rats, pets and garbage, they begin losing their fear of humans. Coyote problems have been reported in cities as far apart as Los Angeles, Vancouver, Chicago and Toronto. Coyotes are expanding their range and moving into cities and towns.

In the southern Ontario town of Grimsby, coyotes have been seen walking down sidewalks in residential areas, showing little fear of people.

At a meeting of Grimsby Town Council in October 2008, wildlife researcher Barry Leighton of St. Catharines, Ontario, said problems arise when coyotes lose their fear of man, because then they will start attacking livestock, pets and people. Some people actually feed wild animals such as coyotes, which is dangerous because it encourages them to see people as a food source and makes them much less wary of close contact with people. He suggested trapping and hunting to control coyotes and restore their fear of humans.

But Lesley Sampson of Coyote Watch Canada told Council that only the specific coyotes causing problems with people should be hunted or trapped. She said coyotes eat mice, rabbits and other small game that do considerable damage to crops, so coyotes that stay wild and do not prey on livestock should be left alone.

Sampson also said that trying to rid an area of coyotes is counter-productive, because any remaining animals will produce more pups than average in response to the reduced population. As well, other coyotes will move in to take over a vacant territory.

Learn to Live with Coyotes

There is no permanent solution to the coyote problem, so people will just have to learn to live with them. The following tips will help.

- Don’t let dogs run loose, or leave them tied outside unsupervised in areas frequented by coyotes. They could become a coyote’s next meal.
- Don’t feed coyotes, either deliberately or otherwise. Keep dog or cat food indoors where wild animals cannot get at it, and don’t leave pet food dishes outside. Keep garbage in animal-proof containers.
- Never approach a wild animal or try to pet it. This encourages the animal to become less afraid of people, increasing the chance the animal will bite someone.
- If approached too closely by a coyote, don’t run. Back off slowly, then walk away.
- Carry a large walking stick or staff for protection while hiking or walking in an area frequented by coyotes, especially if accompanied by a child or dog.
- Never hike alone; there is safety in numbers.

More information about coyotes is available from Eastern Coyote (Coywolf) Research (see link with photo), local conservation area offices, provincial/state or national departments of natural resources and national and provincial/state parks.

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Sources

Cook County, Illinois, Coyote Project

Government of Nova Scotia Department of Natural Resources

Eastern Coyote (Coywolf) Research website

Kim, Edmond. The Bio-geography of the North American Coyote (Canis latrans). San Francisco State University Department of Geography, Fall 2001.

Nova Scotia Department of Natural Resources

Parks Canada, Cape Breton Highlands National Park

Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Cheticamp, Nova Acotia

Schubenacadie Provincial Wildlife Park

Way, J. G. Suburban Howls: Tracking the Eastern Coyote in Urban Massachusetts. Dog Ear Publishing, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA, 2007.

Rare Coyote Death

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

It is rare that a coyote will attack a human let alone an adult human. They have been known to attempt to attack small children and domestic pets, but not adults. This was sadly not the case this week in Cape Breton.

I hike daily with my Muttnik dogs on adventure trails riddled with coyote’s. I have heard them breathing as I hike by in the bush and have to admit being hyper vigilant. I have tracked them in urban centres like Calgary and called the coyote hotline to get them out of residential area’s but I have never thought that they may attack me.

This is such a tragic and terrifying tale but one to remind us that we are in their territory and need to be respectful and careful. They are hungry and are hunter’s.

Please be careful not only of the coyote’s in our urban habitat’s – but also of the bears that have become more common to even the more frightening cougar in our back yards.

Toronto musician dies after coyote attack in Cape Breton

Taylor Mitchell, an up-and-coming singer-songwriter from Toronto, died this morning after she was attacked by two coyotes while hiking in Cape Breton Highlands National Park yesterday.

“[The victim] was airlifted to the QEII hospital in Halifax, where she died of her injuries early this morning,” Sgt. Bridgit Leger of the RCMP said in an interview.

Officers with the RCMP detachment in Cheticamp, N.S., responded to a 911 call placed around 3:15 p.m. yesterday. When they arrived on Skyline Trail, a popular hiking route in the park, they found two coyotes attacking the young hiker.

The coyotes continued to act aggressively after officers arrived. An officer shot one of the animals; it hobbled away and its body has not been recovered, Sgt. Leger said. The other coyote fled into the park.

Police have not yet confirmed the victim’s identity, but Ms. Mitchell’s publicist confirmed an email to media that it was her.

Ms. Mitchell’s MySpace and Facebook pages indicate she was on tour in the Maritimes on her “Atlantic Winds and Sea Shanties” tour. Earlier this month she was nominated for the Canadian Folk Music Awards’ Young Performer of the Year.

According to her website, she was 18 years old and a recent graduate of the Etobicoke School of the Arts, where she majored in musical theatre.

One of the singer’s last shows was at the Broadway Cafe in Sussex, N.B., on Oct. 24. She played an acoustic set to a crowd of two dozen.

“I’m shocked,” Randi Griffin, the cafe’s owner, said this morning. “She was great.”

Ms. Mitchell – who was scheduled to play in Margaretsville, N.S., on Oct.. 30 – is believed to have been hiking alone. Police are now in the process of contacting the victim’s family. The 911 call was placed by another hiker who stumbled upon the attack while it was in progress.

Reports say she suffered bite wounds all over her body.

Parks staff are now searching for the second coyote, which will be destroyed if it is found, said Germaine LaMoine, a spokesman for the Cape Breton field unit for Parks Canada.

“The trail has been closed and it is secure,” Ms. LaMoine said. “We’re very concerned about public safety. That’s foremost on our minds. We are keeping it closed until that second animal has been located and disposed of.”

Ms. LaMoine said the attack in the park are not common. Tests will be conducted on the coyotes’ carcasses if they are recovered.

Seven kilometres long, Skyline Trail, is popular with hikers for its spectacular ocean views and whale-watching opportunities.

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Coyote Awareness

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

The Stanley Park Ecological Society advises dog walkers:

Walk your dog in areas of high pedestrian traffic such as busy streets, jogging and park trails during times of increased activity.

Avoid walking along abandoned properties or densely vegetated areas.

Allow your dog off-leash only in enclosed areas. Make sure your dog is ahead of you and within sight at all times while walking.

Any dog that is off-leash should have an immediate recall response to eliminate potential conflict with coyotes, dogs, and people.

If you encounter a coyote while walking your dog, gather your dog in your arms and shout, wave your arms, or throw objects at the coyote.

If this is not possible, keep the dog on a short leash as you move toward an area with increased activity.

Keep a whistle handy while walking your dog. The whistle may not scare the coyote directly, but it will alert other pedestrians in the area of your need for help.

Do not let your dog to play or interact with coyotes.

The society’s website lists thousands of coyotes sightings right across Vancouver last year, including dozens in Vancouver’s West End, where they find a ready source of food in Stanley Park’s 400 hectares of forest.

Between 2,000 and 3,000 coyotes are now thought to be living in the Lower Mainland, and attacks on small dogs and cats are not uncommon. Some small dogs have even been taken directly off the leash, the society warns.

Large dogs rarely come into conflict with coyotes, except in the late winter and early spring when coyotes mate and are more territorial, the society says.

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Aggressive coyote worries Stanley Park dog walker

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

A Vancouver dog owner says she’ll be carrying a big stick the next time she takes her dog for a walk in Stanley Park.

Janice Harding’s 15-month-old dog Amy nearly became a meal ticket in the urban wilderness after it came nose-to-nose with a coyote in the park recently.

Fortunately, Handing and Amy were inside a fenced area for small dogs in the park, but that didn’t prevent Harding and her dog from getting a scare.

“It was like circling and then it was going backwards and forwards at the bottom there and we were afraid it was going to jump the fence,” said Harding.

Earlier this week, a coyote nabbed another dog and attacked a swan park according to Michael MacIntosh, a wildlife expert with the Vancouver Park Board. He believes it’s the same coyote that’s been prowling the park for more than a month.

Coyotes move in

While Harding’s encounter may have scared her and her pooch, the Stanley Park Ecological Society says such encounters are not all that rare.

The society’s website lists thousands of coyotes sightings right across Vancouver last year, including dozens in Vancouver’s West End, where they find a ready source of food in Stanley Park’s 400 hectares of forest.

Between 2,000 and 3,000 coyotes are now thought to be living in the Lower Mainland, and attacks on small dogs and cats are not uncommon. Some small dogs have even been taken directly off the leash, the society warns.

Large dogs rarely come into conflict with coyotes, except in the late winter and early spring when coyotes mate and are more territorial, the society says.

Children attacked

There have also been seven attacks on humans since coyotes were first spotted in the late 1980s in the Metro Vancouver area, according to records from B.C.’s Ministry of Environment.

Six of those incidents involved small children playing outside, but only two children had to be admitted to hospital.

In comparison, the society quotes statistics from the B.C. Ministry of Health that dog bites lead to an average of 88 hospitalizations per year.

Coyotes are native to large areas of North America and normally prey on small animals. Studies have shown the coyote’s range has actually expanded in the wake of human civilization, and the animals thrive in metropolitan areas, which tend to be full of food sources.

Act aggressive

The ecological society advises if you encounter a coyote, stand your ground and yell and act aggressively to try to scare it away.

That’s what Harding did.

“We got everybody in here and then I went out and I yelled at it to go away,” she said.

Her warning to other dog walkers in the park was simple: “Just be aware what’s behind you.”

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