Post G23-033: First backyard coyote sighting.

 

As a gardener, I try to keep an eye on the thievin’ varmints wonderful creatures of nature passing through my back yard.

As a retiree, I have nothing better to do.

But my eyesight ain’t what it used to be.

Keep that in mind when I say that I’m fairly sure I saw my first backyard coyote yesterday.

The pictures you might typically see — making the coyote look like some noble offshoot of the wolf — don’t match reality of the eastern Coyote.   Around here, if you see something about the size of an adult fox, but without the good looks, chance are, that’s a coyote.  If you see an ugly brown dog with a mottled coat and a long tail, not acting like a domesticated dog, chances are good that you’ve spotted an eastern coyote.


Background

This was not unexpected.  Coyotes are native to the western U.S., and have been expanding eastward for the better part of a century.  The predominant theory is that we invited them in by killing off bigger predators (wolf, bear), and converting forest into open areas.

I got my first-hand introduction to the Eastern coyote about five years ago, camping at Sky Meadows State Park.  That sits adjacent to the ridge of the Blue Ridge.

Just at dusk, the coyotes had themselves a howl.  At first, you hear a few individuals starting it off.  You think, oh, cute, that must be a coyote.  A minute later the entire ridge is ringing with the sound of howling coyotes.  Three minutes later they wind it down, and silence returns.

It was chilling.  There aren’t a few coyotes in those woods.  Like bear, or foxes.   There were hundreds within earshot of where I was camping.  At least by the sound of them.

In short, the Blue Ridge Mountains are infested with coyotes.  Given how few bear and foxes there are left, I’m guessing coyotes are now the dominant predator species in this area.  That’s a complete change from my youth, where there were no coyotes in this area, period.

And they are here in the ‘burbs.  There have been sporadic reports of pets being eaten by coyotes, here in the  D.C. area.  I think I spotted one crossing a construction site a few years back.

But it’s a different thing entirely to find one eyeballing your back yard. It skedaddled as soon as I opened my back porch door.

I would like to think I’m not the sort of person to form an opinion about animals based on cuteness.  For example, I loathe deer, for the destruction they bring.  Despite being handsome creatures.  Foxes, I like for the fact that they eat squirrels, and not just because they are really elegant-looking beautiful animals.

Eastern coyote?  My gut reaction is, one step up from rat.  They may be noble wolf-like creatures in the western climate.  And most photos you’ll see of them make them look the part.  But around here, they look like mangy stray dogs.  As in this view, from Wikipedia:


Good or bad?

Looks aside, near as I can tell, this newest invasive species brings along only one good attribute:  They kill deer. 

Better yet, they kill baby deer. More specifically, in many areas, coyotes are the number one cause of death for fawns.  (See, e.g., this random reference).

Much of the literature on this topic comes from the deer-hunting community, which of course tut-tuts over these premature deer losses.  The deer hunters have a valid point of view.  For them, coyotes are competition.  Having eliminated wolves and nearly eliminated bear in this area, the deer hunter is the only native carnivore that’s in competition with the coyote.

By contrast, as a back-yard gardener, I’m am definitely on Team Coyote on this one. 

However.

However, coyotes are omnivores.  Sure they eat fawns.  They also eat poodles.  And squirrels.  And garbage.  And fruits and berries, if there’s nothing else around.

Oh, and they are known to attack small children occasionally.  Just thought you might want to know, in case you were still harboring some sympathy for coyotes.

This invasive species is definitely going to put some pressure on our local fox population.  And that’s a pity, because the foxes in my neighborhood don’t go around hunting down my neighbor’s cats.  Or kids.

So if the coyote succeeds in pushing out foxes, we’ll have replaced a relatively benign and good-looking wild creature with one that’s far more of a nuisance.  And ugly to boot.  But one that is capable of reducing the deer population.


Summary

If Fluffy goes missing out of your backyard any time soon, you’ll know whom to suspect.

Coyotes aren’t advertising their presence.  They aren’t howling, here, yet.  (I think that’s a large-group activity for them and they aren’t yet that numerous.)  They are stealthy, and they are hard to spot.  They are easy to mistake for a fox or a stray dog.

But they are here.  As in, prowling the suburban back-yards of Vienna VA.

In the grand scheme of ongoing slow-mo environmental apocalypse — (reference insect loss, reference global warming) — I guess this hardly even registers.  Just another nuisance invasive species to deal with.