THE MAMMALS
MOUNTAIN COYOTE. Canis latrans lestes5
Field characters.General
appearance that of a large collie dog (pl. 39a); head and body
about 30 to 33 inches long, tail with hairs 12 to 15 inches; ears
pointed, about 4-1/2 inches (114 mm.) high, habitually carried erect.
General coloration gray, or grayish brown, with black along back, and
with reddish brown of varying tone on nose, ears, back, and legs. Tail
very bushy, 4 or more inches in diameter, black tipped. Tracks:
Dog-like, longer than wide, in a large animal 2-1/4 by 2-3/4 inches (6
by 7 cm.); impression of heel pad but little larger than that of any
individual toe; claw marks not always showing. Droppings:
Dog-like, about 3/4 inch in diameter. Voice: A loud, moderately
high-pitched barking, interspersed with shrill wailings, usually
continued for several seconds; rarely heard except during the
night.
Occurrence.Moderately
common almost throughout the Yosemite section, from the westernmost
foothills eastward across the Sierran crest to the Mono Lake district.
In winter some of the high mountain individuals descend to lower
altitudes, and range down on the west slope to at least the 3500 foot
contour, as at Cascades. In Yosemite Valley the animal is most often
seen or heard in fall and winter. Frequents various sorts of country;
often seen in the open. Usually seen singly.
5Our series of specimens,
skins and skulls, from the Yosemite region, serve to demonstrate beyond
much doubt that two races of 'mountain' coyote are represented, a high
mountain and Great Basin form, and a foothill form. The Park rangers,
and trappers generally, recognize the two, often distinguishing the
larger, stouter, and more grayish colored animal under the name "gray
wolf." This is certainly the Canis latrans lestes Merriam. The
foothill animal, ranging down the west slope of the Sierras from about
the 6000-foot contour nearly to the edge of the San Joaquin Valley,
differs from lestes proper, in being of smaller average size, in
having brighter color (more reddish) and a lighter built skull, and in
certain other cranial characters. The relationship of this foothill form
is clearly close to lestes, under which name we place it. Some of
the specimens at hand from both El Portal and Yosemite Valley are
intermediate in character, indicating that there had been free
interbreeding of the animals at about the level where their respective
ranges meet. There is likelihood that a third kind, the Valley Coyote,
Canis ochropus ochropus Eschscholtz, also occurs in the Yosemite
section, at its extreme western end, about Snelling. Unfortunately, we
obtained no specimens of coyote out on the plains. This coyote of the
open San Joaquin Valley is sharply distinct from either of the races of
the Mountain Coyote by reason of its coarser, less furry coat, which is
of a light reddish rather than either deep reddish or grayish cast of
color. It has much larger ears, a longer slenderer snout, and smaller
teeth.
In spite of the great amount of trapping and hunting
carried on against them for many years, coyotes remain fairly common in
the Yosemite section. Summer travelers, especially in the territory
above the level of Yosemite Valley, are likely to catch sight of the
animals or, if not so fortunate, at least to see their tracks or hear
their howling. At almost every camp which we made in the region we
ourselves were apprized of the presence of the animals in one or another
of these ways.
The coyote is not easily to be confused with any
other wild mammal. It resembles in general appearance some of the
domestic breeds of dogs, especially the collie and the 'wolf dogs,' yet
offers decided points of difference. The body of the coyote is high and
narrow (compressed), the face and snout long and tapering (pl.
39a), the ears high (4 inches or more in an adult) and habitually
carried erect, the tail moderately long, round, and bushy, the feet
smaller than in a dog of the same bulk, and the legs slenderer and
relatively long, the body being carried well above the ground. From all
of the foxes the coyote differs in its much larger size and in its
relatively longer legs. From the California Valley Coyote, which lives
on the San Joaquin plains, the Mountain Coyote is distinguished by
larger size, stouter build, greater weight of body, and heavier fur. In
tone of color some of the high mountain individuals are so much paler
than the foothill and valley animals as to give rise to the local term
"gray wolf."
An average adult Mountain Coyote measures about 45
inches from tip of nose to tip of tail. The tail is about 13 inches
long. The height of the animal at the shoulder is about 20 inches. The
weight of a male is in the neighborhood of 25 pounds. Some will exceed
this weight, while many of the animals which are trapped in late fall,
that is, the young of the year, will weigh considerably less. Females
are somewhat smaller and of lighter weight than males of a corresponding
age.
The pelage of the Mountain Coyote is heavy all
through the year, being always denser and 'woollier' than that of the
Valley species at the same season. In the coat of the Mountain Coyote
there are relatively few of the coarse overhairs or 'guard hairs' while
there is proportionately more of the fine under-fur. The reverse is the
case in the Valley Coyote. In other words, the Mountain Coyote is a
'woolly' animal; while the Valley species is 'hairy.' A thick coat of
fur to protect it from cold is of course essential for an animal which
dwells during the winter months in snow-covered mountains. The coat of
the Mountain Coyote is probably subjected to relatively slight wear,
because the animal lives more in the open and has its den among rocks
rather than in a burrow in the ground. Its tail never loses its rounded
'bottle-brush' form. One molt occurs each year, in the fall, taking
place some time between September and December. The transition from the
old hair and fur to the new does not bring about nearly so great a
change in appearance in this species as it does in the Valley Coyote.
Just after the molt is completed, when all the old hair has fallen out
and all of the new is fully grown in, the fur is prime, from the
standpoint of the trapper and fur dealer. The wear which does occur in
the Mountain Coyote, even though slight, results in lightening the coat
color; some of the black hair tippings are lost and at the same time the
reddish tones pale out, so that the general gray tone becomes even more
pronounced.
With the coming of autumn, many of the small mammals
at the higher elevations go into hibernation and, with the arrival of
the snow, the retreats and forage grounds of others are covered over.
The Mountain Coyotes, which have lived well all summer, are now forced
to hunt more assiduously for food. The migratory tendency which results
in the appearance of some of the big gray coyotes at the lower altitudes
on the west side of the mountains may well be a result of this stress.
In October, the numbers of coyotes in Yosemite Valley are augmented, and
from then on the animals are more or less common in the environs of the
Valley between the altitudes of 3500 and 7000 feet. The high-zone
animals probably never go lower than is necessary to find an adequate
supply of food. In Yosemite they keep to the north side of the Valley
about Mirror Lake and in the taluses near Rocky Point, Yosemite Falls,
and Indian Cañon, where favorable den sites abound, and whence
they can sally forth at night to search the meadows for mice and
gophers, the houseyards for chickens, or the garbage pits for table
scraps.
The Mountain Coyote ranges upward regularly to above
timber line. On July 17, 1915, tracks of a Mountain Coyote were seen in
Donohue Pass, altitude 11,100 feet, near Mount Lyell. This is our
highest station for the occurrence of the species. This animal had
crossed the 'pot-marked' snowfield, stepping carefully on the edges of
the 'riffles,' seldom dropping into the holes.
The track of a coyote cannot be distinguished surely
from that of a large dog, but as dogs are not allowed in Yosemite
National Park, save when they are occasionally used by rangers, little
chance of confusion on that score is likely to arise. The four toes and
one heel pad each make an impression, that of the heel being only
slightly the larger. On soft ground or snow, into which the feet can
sink, the claws, also, leave imprints. The foot impression as a whole is
longer than broad, that of a large animal in soft snow measuring 80 by
70 millimeters. The Mountain Lion track is much larger, and
proportionately wider, the heel imprint is much wider, and no claw marks
ever show. The wolverine's track shows five unequal toes and a very
large triangular heel pad. The tracks of all the other mountain
carnivores (bears of course excepted) are much smaller than those of the
Mountain Coyote.
The coyote's foot is so constructed as to give the
animal, in spite of its weight and size, a decided advantage when
traveling over snow. The toes spread somewhat, thus giving an expanded
area of support. The coyote is thereby enabled to run over relatively
soft and deep snow, where a deer would break through and make, at best,
only slow progress.
The gait of a Mountain Coyote resembles in certain
respects that of a dog. Undisturbed, the animal walks or trots. When
stalking prey, such as a mouse or gopher, in the open, it proceeds very
slowly and with caution. Its best gait for making distance is a gallop,
which is easier than the gallop of most dogs. The speed at which a
frightened coyote can lope away is surprising to anybody observing one
for the first time. The animal now and then casts a crafty glance to one
side or the other but this in no degree lessens the rate of its
departure. We did not ourselves catch sight of more than a single coyote
at any one time. Ranger Townsley reports seeing two together on one
occasion. We have no definite knowledge of the animals occurring in
larger groups at any time, in spite of rumors that they some times "hunt
in packs."
The Mountain Coyote as compared with the Valley
species is thought to be of bolder disposition; and it is much more of a
hunter of the larger active sorts of prey. The Mountain Coyote seems to
prefer to get its prey through capture in the open or by digging it out.
It is less of a carrion feeder. It is not at all averse, however, to
eating carrion. It will feed on the carcass of a deer long dead; and we
have captured coyotes in traps baited with the partly decayed bodies of
small mammals and birds discarded days before in the preparation of
specimens.
On July 25, 1920, at the Dudley ranch, 6 miles east
of Coulterville, Mr. Donald D. McLean had an exceptional opportunity to
see a coyote in action. Mr. McLean had taken his position at daylight on
top of one of the barns. Considerably before sunrise a coyote suddenly
appeared close to the house and snapped up one of a flock of chickens
that had just started out to forage. The coyote nabbed the chicken so
quickly that the bird gave but one frightened squawk. Seemingly the
coyote held the head and breast of the bird both at once in its jaws;
also he so held it that it could not flap its wings; and he quickly and
quietly bore it out of sight.
The majority of the Mountain Coyotes trapped are
relatively young, for it is of course the younger, less experienced
individuals that most easily fall victims to the trapper's skill. Some
individuals may be trapped yet escape, and these probably carefully shun
traps and bait thereafter. Removal of even a small number of the younger
coyotes, however, gives the others a greater chance for survival since
there are fewer to use up the available food supply. Those Mountain
Coyotes who, made wise ('educated') through experience, survive their
various enemies, grow to unusually large size and probably attain to
ages far above the average for the species. These particularly old,
large, and crafty individuals sometimes live in a locality for years and
become well known to the residents of the region. One such animal was
reported to us in 1915 to be living in the vicinity of Sweetwater Creek.
These large individuals of the Mountain Coyote are the present day
"wolves" of the Yosemite region. No true wolf is known to have occurred
anywhere in middle California since about 1870.
The most usual utterance to be heard from coyotes is
a rapid series of rather high pitched barking notes, interspersed with
shrill wails, the whole continued for several seconds at a time. Trapped
animals have been heard to give low growls and snarls, and we may infer
that these weaker notes are used by the coyotes when in the wild, either
toward others of their kind, or when alone and pursuing prey. The voice
of the Mountain Coyote, as usually heard, is deeper toned than that of
the Valley species, and so much more voluminous that to one observer it
suggested comparison with a steam whistle. There is less of the
high-pitched wailing, or squealing, in the voice of the Mountain Coyote,
and its howling is therefore more like that of a large domestic dog. The
barking choruses are most often heard in early morning or late evening;
sometimes they are given during the night, especially when it is
moonlight, but they are rarely heard during the middle of the day.
Often, when one animal, or a pair, calls, others in the vicinity will
answer. Thus, at Williams Butte, on September 18, 1915, at 5:40 A.M.,
one or more coyotes off to the south began baying. These were answered
by others nearby, and then the animals called back and forth for some
time. At 9:30 A.M., the same day, in broad sunlight, others were heard,
and at 7:15 P.M. there was another chorus. Loud noises sometimes start
coyotes barking. On the night of July 28, 1915, at Tenaya Lake, two
burros brayed, whereupon coyotes in the neighborhood set up a succession
of calls.
The chorus may, in reality, be the product of but one
individual, whose intonations are such as to give the effect of two or
even more voices heard simultaneously. We are unable to give any
conclusive statement in this regard.
The food of the Mountain Coyote includes a wide
variety of items, some of which have been alluded to in the preceding
paragraphs. Usually, little knowledge of the coyote's food habits can be
obtained by direct observation, as the animals do much of their hunting
and feeding during the night. Even persons whose business keeps them out
of doors much of the time in good coyote country do not often see a
coyote actually eating. Our evidence, therefore, is, much of it,
indirect. By far the greatest amount of data now at hand has been
obtained by examining faeces (droppings). The hair and bones of mammals,
the feathers of birds, and the seeds of plants are often recognizable in
the droppings of the animal, and in many instances they may be
identified even as to the species.
The droppings of a Mountain Coyote found in a trail
at the head of Yosemite Creek basin on October 9, 1915, contained the
forepaws of a Sierra Nevada Pocket Gopher (Thomomys monticola
monticola), jaws, other bones, and hair of an adult and an immature
Gambel White-footed Mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus gambeli), hair
of the California Ground Squirrel (Citellus beecheyi beecheyi),
and hair of the Rocky Mountain Mule Deer (Odocoileus hemionus
hemionus). Another lot contained what appeared to be hair of the
Golden-mantled Ground Squirrel. A third lot of faeces, collected near
Dudley on August 9, 1920, consisted almost entirely of seeds from
manzanita berries (Arctostaphylos mariposa).
Deer hair is commonly found in the droppings of the
Mountain Coyote, but this fact does not necessarily mean that coyotes
themselves regularly kill deer. On the contrary, it is likely that much
of the coyote's venison comes from carcasses of deer killed and left
cached by the Mountain Lion. Ranger Townsley has told us that on April
11, 1916, near Grouse Creek, he came upon two Mountain Coyotes circling
the carcass of a deer which had been killed by a Mountain Lion, and that
they were evidently about to feed on the deer when frightened off by
shots. However, the coyote is known to have pursued and killed deer.
Young does and fawns are probably the ones most often obtained in this
way. When, in early winter, the deer are overtaken by a fall of snow
more than a foot in depth, progress for them becomes difficult; they may
be more easily and successfully run down by coyotes then than in the
summer.
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