Sunday, February 5, 2012

Cool Canine

Went almost to the coast to do the Creole and Grand Chenier Quads today.  On Little Chenier Road, I had the following creature of interest:


















Dark coyote?  Coy-dog?  Pretty awesome sight, whatever it was.

Mac Myers sent me the following regarding canines:


New York State State Museum scientist says wolves and coyotes in St.
Lawrence County and the rest of the eastern U.S. are hybrids between gray wolves, coyotes and domestic dogs.

Dr. Roland Kays, the museum's curator of mammals, has co-authored a new research article, representing the most detailed genomic study of its kind.
He is one of 16 national and international scientists who collaborated on the study that used the dog genome to survey the global genetic diversity in dogs, wolves and coyotes.

The study used over 48,000 genetic markers, making it the most detailed genomic study of any wild vertebrate species.

The research results are especially relevant to wolves and coyotes in the Northeast. The study shows a gradient of hybridization in wolves, with pure wolves in western states and increasing hybridization as you move east.

Populations of eastern coyotes, which only colonized the region in the last
60 years, were minor hybrids, with some introgression of genetic material from wolves and domestic dogs. For example, Northeastern coyotes, including those in New York State, had genetic material primarily from coyotes (82 percent), with a minor contribution from dogs (9 percent) and wolves (9 percent).

Midwestern and southeastern coyotes were genetically 90 percent coyote, with an average of 7.5 percent dog and 2.5 percent wolf.

Wolves in the western Great Lakes area averaged a genetic makeup of 85 percent wolf and 15 percent coyote, while wolves in Algonquin Park in eastern Ontario averaged 58 percent wolf, and the 'red wolf' in North Carolina was only 24 percent wolf and 76 percent coyote.

The advanced genetic techniques used in this study also allowed the scientists to estimate when the hybridization initially occurred. Kays said "In most cases this breeding across species lines seems to have happened at times when humans were hunting eastern wolves to extinction, and the few remaining animals could find no proper mates, so took the best option they could get." Kays continues, "The exceptions were an older hybridization between coyotes and wolves in the western Great Lakes dating from 600-900 years ago, and a coyote-dog hybridization in the eastern U.S. about 50 years ago, when coyote were first colonizing eastern forests."

This study also provides fresh data on the controversy over the species status of the Red Wolf in North Carolina, and the Eastern Canadian Wolf in Ontario. Both are medium-sized wolves that some have argued represent unique species. However, this new detailed genetic data shows both are the result of hybridizations between coyotes and wolves over the last few hundred years, and do not share a common origin in a unique eastern wolf species.

This research is also relevant to a recent U.S. Fish and Wildlife proposal to remove the western Great Lakes wolves from the Endangered Species Act by showing that those wolves are only marginally hybridized with coyotes, should be considered a subspecies of the Gray Wolf, and have no genetic ties to a more endangered form of eastern wolf.

The research is published online in Genome Research, an international, peer-reviewed journal that publishes outstanding original research that provides novel insights into the genome biology of all organisms, including advances in genomic medicine.

This study follows another research paper co-authored by Kays last year in the journal Biology Letters, which used museum specimens and genetic samples to show that eastern coyotes hybridized with wolves to rapidly evolve into a larger form over the last 90 years, dramatically expanding their geographic range and becoming the top predator in the Northeast. This hybridization contributed to the evolution of coyotes from mousers of western grasslands to deer hunters of eastern forests. The resulting coy-wolf hybrids are larger, with wider skulls that are better adapted for hunting deer.

In the past, Kays has also studied coyote diet and distribution in Albany's Pine Bush and in the Adirondack Mountains. His research indicated that deer accounted for approximately one-third of the coyote's diet and that they made extensive use of forested areas.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Paul, I birded with you quite a few years ago, really many years ago. I have just recently retired from teaching and discovered your blog. I enjoy reading it for the birds but your blog on "Cool Canine" was interesting and informative. 16 years ago we moved near Sunset on 5 1/2 acres. Since then we have seen a number of coyotes and/or coy-dogs. They run in packs and sound like coyotes. Some have looked like coyotes but others are more dog looking. When they howl, our dog likes to add her 2-cents worth as well.
On another note, We have plenty of birds on our property (3 hummers right now). Along with the birds, a bobcat usually will visit us about once or twice a year, and last summer a black bear decided to help himself to all my bird feeders.
I am trying to get back to birding and reading your blogs makes me realize how much I enjoy birding.
Donnette Lafleur

Paul Conover said...

Donnette,
Delighted to hear from you! Sounds like you guys have a nice set-up. Maybe when I retire from teaching I'll get 5 acres. Is that part of the TRSL package? I hope you do get some birding in. The Sunset area is great, and you're sure to get some nice stuff.
Btw, have you let Dave Patton know about the hummers?

Donnette said...

Paul, Maybe by the time you are ready to retire, you could take over our place which besides birds is full of native plants. My husband, Dwynn, retired after 40 years of teaching at UL and, yes, he falls under TRSL.
I haven't contacted Dave but have though about it since the three hummers seem to be 3 different species, females or immatures, and would love to know what they are. Lately they are not around as much as before but do show up at least once during the day. Last fall, I had a female Calliope that stay around about a month. Easy to ID since she looked just like all the pics. Also got another birding friend to confirm my ID. A while back, I had a male Calliope which was too cool.
Do you have Dave's number? Send me email at:
dklafleur@gmail.com
I can also give you my phone number in case you want to come out and see the Wood Duck races on our little pond.
Donnette