coyotes

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Meet Your New Nocturnal, Rat-Eating Neighbors

City dwellers all over the world will have to get used to sharing their downtown promenades and piazzas with hairy beasts of the night.

Coyote in Chicago's Lincoln Park. Photo by John Picken

In “Werewolves of London,” Warren Zevon says he “saw a werewolf drinking a piña colada at Trader Vic’s. His hair was perfect.” Fortunately, most urban predators have not yet developed a taste for blended alcoholic beverages or fancy coiffure, but city dwellers all over the world will still have to increasingly get used to sharing their downtown promenades and piazzas with hairy beasts of the night. This week National Geographic has an interesting piece on Chicago’s urban coyotes—after dwindling habitats first drove them into the bird-and-squirrel bonanza of the suburbs, these crafty canines have now moved on to a more cosmopolitan lifestyle, prowling the late-night streets of the Windy City. These downtown dogs have actually adapted their behavior to this new environment, shifting to a nocturnal schedule that avoids the daytime rush, and learning how to cross high-traffic roads. They’re "pushing their ecological envelope," Stan Gehrt, a wildlife ecologist at Ohio State University in Columbus told National Geographic. Gehrt estimates the population of the coyotes to be about 2,000, and has been studying their behavior by affixing the animals with GoPro cameras.

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