1 / 28

Coyote (Canis latrans)

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

shayla
Download Presentation

Coyote (Canis latrans)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


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

  2. 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”

  3. Native to Americas • Change distribution over past 200 years • Historic wolf control  # of coyotes • Potential effects on #s of snowshoe hares & bobcats

  4. Red Fox(Vulpes vulpes) • Largest fox (3-10 kg) • Solitary, partly territorial • HR size varies with habitat • Nocturnal or crepuscular

  5. Very adaptable – “urban foxes” • Possibly not native to NA ??

  6. Red Fox(Vulpes vulpes)

  7. Monogamous • Family dens + burrows • 1-13 pups (avg. = 5) • Sexually mature ~ 10 months

  8. Color Variations “Silver fox” – prized by furriers “Cross fox”

  9. Arctic Fox(Alopex lagopus) • Smaller than red fox (3-8 kg) • Adapted to arctic • Varied diet (small mammals, eggs, carrion from polar bears)

  10. Only in far north of NA • Tundra in summer & ocean ice in winter • Shorter dark pelage in summer • Blue & white color phases

  11. Arctic Fox(Alopex lagopus) Circumpolar distribution

  12. Arctic Fox • monogamous • 2 litters of 5-8 pups • large, complex dens • flexible social system – family territories • may form communal bands that scavenge together

  13. Grey Fox(Urocyon cinereoargenteus) • smaller than red fox (3-7 kg) • more omnivorous • tree climbers • woodlands & rocky areas (less agriculture than red fox)

  14. Grey Fox • Southern & Midwestern states • timing of breeding varies w/latitude • monogamous family units • 1-7 pups (avg.=4)

  15. Swift Fox(Vulpes velox) • Smallest fox in NA (1-3kg) • Occurs in south-central US • Prairie grasslands & deserts • speeds of 50 mph

  16. Swift Fox(Vulpes velox) • 2-6 pups per litter • nocturnal • Endangered • #s declined in past 50 years • Threats: predator & rodent control, habitat change

  17. 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

  18. Gray Wolf(Canis lupus) • largest canid (23-80 kg) • color variation (white – black) • diet varies geographically • habitats: tundra, forest, prairie, desert, etc.

  19. 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

  20. 1973 -- lower 48 listed “Endangered” (except MN = “Threatened”) • 2003 -- 3 DPSs • Eastern - Threatened • Western - Threatened • Southwestern - Endangered

  21. 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)

  22. 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

  23. Red Wolf • 1967 listed as Endangered under ESA • 1970: < 100 survive in TX & LO • Captive breeding & reintroduction

  24. 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

  25. extinct in native habitat by 1950s • 1998: 11 wolves reintroduced to AZ & NM

More Related