Date: March
11, 2019
Source: University of Washington
Across
North America, coyotes are moving into urban environments, and regardless of
how they feel about it, urban residents are having to get used to some new
animal neighbors. A big question for wildlife researchers is how coyotes
habituate to humans, which can potentially lead to conflict.
A study
led by a University of Washington Tacoma faculty member, recently published
in Ecology and Evolution, suggests coyotes can habituate to humans quickly
and that habituated parents pass this fearlessness on to their offspring.
"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," said first author Christopher Schell, an assistant professor at UW
Tacoma. "We want to understand the mechanisms that contribute to
habituation and fearlessness, to prevent these situations from occurring."
The
study, done as part of Schell's doctoral work at the University of Chicago,
focused on eight coyote families at the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
Predator Research Facility in Millville, Utah. The research center was founded
in the 1970s to reduce coyote attacks on sheep and other livestock.
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