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Wildlife Research Wildlife Research Society
Ecology, management and conservation in natural and modified habitats
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Open Access)

Space use by resident and transient coyotes in an urban–rural landscape mosaic

Numi Mitchell A F , Michael W. Strohbach B , Ralph Pratt C , Wendy C. Finn D and Eric G. Strauss E
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A The Conservation Agency, 67 Howland Ave, Jamestown, RI 02835, USA.

B Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Department of Geography, Landscape Ecology Lab, Unter den Linden 6, 10099 Berlin, Germany.

C West Greenwich Animal Hospital, 14 Victory Hwy, West Greenwich, RI 02817, USA.

D Department of Natural Resources Science, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI 02881, USA.

E Loyola Marymount University Center for Urban Resilience, 1 LMU Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90045, USA.

F Corresponding author. Email: numimitchell@gmail.com

Wildlife Research 42(6) 461-469 https://doi.org/10.1071/WR15020
Submitted: 2 February 2015  Accepted: 15 August 2015   Published: 28 September 2015

Journal Compilation © CSIRO Publishing 2015 Open Access CC BY-NC-ND

Abstract

Context: Coyotes (Canis latrans) have adapted successfully to human landscape alteration in the past 150 years and in recent decades have successfully moved into urban areas. While this causes concern about human–wildlife conflicts, research also suggests that coyotes tend to avoid humans and human activity in urban areas. For improving management, a better understanding of space use by coyotes is needed.

Aims: To study how coyote social behaviour influences fine-scale space use in urban areas we present results from an extensive, multi-year GPS telemetry study (2005–13). The study area in coastal Rhode Island is a mosaic of rural, suburban and urban land use and coyotes have only recently arrived.

Methods: We differentiated between two social classes: residents (individuals that have established a territory; n = 24) and transients (individuals that have no territory; n = 7). Space use was analysed using mixed effect models and detailed land-cover data.

Key results: Coyotes tended to select for agricultural and densely vegetated land cover and against land used for housing and commerce. Pasture and cropland were preferred by residents and avoided by transients, especially at night, indicating the role of agricultural land as prime foraging habitat. Both groups selected densely vegetated land cover for daytime shelter sites. Transients selected for densely vegetated land cover both day and night, indicating use for both shelter and foraging. Resident coyotes avoided high- and medium-density housing more than transients.

Conclusions: We interpret land-cover selection by resident coyotes as indicative of coyote habitat preference, while transients more often occupied marginal habitats that probably do not reflect their preferences. Differences in land cover selection between residents and transients suggest that transients have a corollary strategy to avoid residents.

Implications: With cover and food appearing to be important drivers of space use, coexistence strategies can build on controlling food resources as well as on the tendency of coyotes to avoid humans. Nevertheless, transients, having the need to avoid territorial resident coyotes as well, show a reduced aversion to land cover with high human activity, creating a higher potential for human–wildlife conflicts.

Additional keywords: Canis latrans, GPS telemetry, human–wildlife interaction, resource selection, Rhode Island, suburban, urban.


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