Wyomingites might be used to seeing coyotes alone and assume theyâre solitary loners, but theyâre actually much like wolves and love living in packs, according to wildlife biologists.
Recently, theresâs been concern over a pack of four coyotes reportedly killing pets and wreaking havoc in a neighborhood near Douglas.
Those coyotes were described to Cowboy State Daily as young and scrawny-looking.
That makes sense, because this is the time year when litters of young coyotes might split from their parents, retired biologist Franz Camenzind of Jackson told Cowboy State Daily.
âIt could be a litter dispersing. Itâs also possible that maybe the adults were killed at some point and itâs literally some juveniles just raising hell,â said Camenzind, who studied coyote behavior in and around the National Elk Refuge near Jackson.
Wildlife biologist Robert Crabtree told Cowboy State Daily that the Douglas coyotes probably arenât a well-established pack.
âIt could have been some non-pack members that were grouping upâ for the sake of opportunity, said Crabtree, who is the is founder, chief scientist and president of the Yellowstone Ecological Research Center.
Those coyotes were also described as unusually bold and unafraid of people.
Thatâs typical of coyotes that have discovered an easy food source, Crabtree said.
âAnytime you see coyotes around people, theyâve always been fed or theyâve been rewarded food. And they lose their shyness,â he said. âIf theyâve killed your neighborâs cat, that essentially like feeding the coyotes, and they remember that.â
Little Wolves
Coyotes are much more like wolves than people might realize, the biologists said.
âTheyâre very similar to wolves, though their average pack sizes are smaller,â said Crabtree, who has led studies of coyotes in Yellowstone National Park for decades.
Most coyote packs include a breeding pair and whichever of their offspring hang around, he said.
Coyote pups are usually born in April, and some of the offspring might take off on their own in August or September, Crabtree said. Those that opt to hang around might stay for another year or two before also taking off.
âThey hang around to get food, and also to help raise their younger brothers and sisters,â Crabtree said.
Coyotes packing up is regarded as common in the Eastern U.S., but coyotes out West do it as well whenever they get a chance even if itâs not commonly observed by humans, Camenzind said.
âIâm not sure thereâs that much behavioral difference between Eastern coyotes and Western coyotes,â he said.
Solo Hunting
Camenzind and Crabtree said people might frequently see coyotes alone because they often hunt alone, whereas wolves almost always hunt in packs.
The reason for that is simple, they said. Wolves are usually out after big prey animals like elk, which take a team effort to kill.
Coyotes generally eat smaller critters such as prairie dogs, mice, voles or even grasshoppers.
âCoyotes are big enough to kill ungulates if they need to, but theyâre small enough to subsists on mice,â Crabtree said. âA wolf canât subsist on mice.â
As one wolf in Yellowstone recently learned the hard way, trying to hunt elk alone is a good way to risk getting stomped.
When coyotes team up to go after bigger prey like elk calves or ranchersâ sheep, itâs because theyâve got young to feed, Camenzind said.
âThink about it; if Iâm trying to feed a whole family, Iâm going to take a big shopping cart into Albertsons,â he said. âIf Iâm feeding just myself, then Iâm only taking a small bag, and itâs the same idea with coyotes.â
Wolves Are More Brutal To Each Other
Wolves also favor larger packs because territorial battles between wolves are far more brutal than those between coyotes.
âWhen wolves fight, they kill each other. So, thereâs an advantage to being in bigger groups,â Crabtree said. âWhen coyotes fight, they donât kill each other.â
So, coyotes donât need as big a pack to prevail in canine gang wars.
Camenzind said heâs found dead coyotes that might have been killed by other coyotes, but thatâs extremely rare.
Coyote packs control their territory in three ways, he said.
âHowlingâ to warn strangers away, or marking territory with urine.
The last defensive measure is âoutright chasingâ strange coyotes, which they can detect from hundreds of yards away, he said.
âThe chasing coyote will usually chase the other up near to or just right at the boundary of his territory and then quit,â Camenzind said.
Human, Wolf Interference Shrinks Coyote Packs
In Wyoming, Coyotes are classified as a predatory species. That means they can be killed at any time by just about any means possible, without hunting licenses or bag limits.
Camenzind said he wishes people would ease up on coyotes.
âWhen people arenât continually killing them, theyâll form stable packs and establish territories,â he said.
So long as a local pack isnât preying on livestock, theyâll drive other coyotes away, which can actually help protect cattle and sheep.
Even so, Camenzind said he grew up on farm in the Midwest and understands why farmers and ranchers arenât fond of predators.
âIâm a fan of coyotes, but I also totally understand that theyâre predators and they kill things for a living,â he said.
In places where coyotes are regularly shot or trapped, theyâre less likely to form packs, he added. Instead, pairs will stick together and boot their pups out once theyâre mature enough.
âCoyotes are adaptable and can adapt to living in pairs,â he said.
The presence of wolves, which sometimes kill coyotes, will also shrink coyote pack sizes, Crabtree said.
Before wolves returned to Yellowstone, the average coyote pack size was six and it wasnât unheard of to see coyote packs up to a dozen or more, he said.
After the wolves came back, the average size of a coyote pack in Yellowstone is three, Crabtree said.
Coyote pack sizes also vary according to how much food is available, he said.
âTheyâs why we had such big coyote packs in the Lamar Valley (of Yellowstone Park), there was so much food there,â Crabtree said.
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.