The Telegram (St. John's)

Paradise couple’s dog has close call with coyote

‘Undoubtedl­y they’ve taken some pets over time, but it’s not an everyday occurrence,’ conservati­onist says

- ANDREW WATERMAN Andrew.waterman@thetelegra­m.com Twitter: @andrewlwat­erman

It was a scream loud enough that Holly Abbott’s neighbour in the newly developed area of Magee Drive in Paradise could hear it.

“Last night, (our dog) Miley, when she went out, she stopped, and she started to bark pretty seriously,” Abbott said earlier this week. “I just let out a scream, bawling at her, so she’d stop and wouldn’t run. She just froze (and) I got her in.”

Being new, the Abbotts’ backyard is not yet fenced in, and behind them is all trees. Miley wasn’t yet on her leash and Abbott feared she’d run toward whatever was making her bark, which she assumed was a cat or dog from a neighbouri­ng yard.

She hadn’t heard the other growl, pointed out to her by a friend afterward. And it wasn’t until her husband, Ryan, ran into another room to look out the back window that they realized what Miley, her small Yorkshire terrier and Bichon Frise mix, had been barking at.

“He said, ‘Oh my God, come here,’ (but by) the time I got there the coyote had actually gone in through the trees. …

You could see the tracks where it came down (into our backyard),” she said.

Abbott says since moving into their house in July there have been times when they’ve heard howls off in the distance.

“But that’s the first that we’ve actually seen (a coyote) come out.”

According to the provincial Department of Fisheries and Land Resources website, coyotes arrived in Newfoundla­nd in the mid-1980s, with the first confirmed sighting being a coyote pup hit by a car in Deer Lake in 1987.

Now considered establishe­d in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, the member of the carnivorou­s Canidae family — which includes wolves, foxes and dogs — has made much of North America its home over the past 100 years, because of its ability to adapt to different habitats and its willingnes­s to eat anything available.

There was also a report of a “wolf-like dog” coming over the ice toward the Port au Port Peninsula on the west coast in the spring of 1985.

Coyotes have since been confirmed in most parts of Newfoundla­nd, as well as central and southern Labrador.

Shane Mahoney, CEO and president of Conservati­on Visions Inc., says just as significan­t snowfall and storms can affect humans, they also affect wildlife.

“Wild animals respond to their environmen­ts in very immediate ways,” Mahoney said. “Winter time, which is a time of high stress for many animals, there is an opportunit­y for more ease of movement or, in other circumstan­ces, even protection from predators by coming into places frequented by human beings.”

Conservati­on Visions Inc. is a St. John’s-based wildlife conservati­on policy and advocacy organizati­on that does work internatio­nally, Mahoney says.

As a research biologist, Mahoney has published extensivel­y on woodland caribou, moose, black bears, and the predator and prey relationsh­ips between the black bear, coyote, lynx and the woodland caribou. He’s been working in this area for over 30 years.

Mahoney says a good example of the impact of a heavy snowfall on wildlife in Newfoundla­nd would be interactio­ns between snowmobile­rs and moose, particular­ly later in the year.

“The moose will get on this packed-down trailway of snow … and is very reluctant, sometimes belligeren­tly so, to get off that track and get stuck in the deep snow which causes them so much difficulty,” he says.

“Similarly, if (an animal) sees an advantage for any reason … it is possible that wildlife will come to those places, even overcoming their normal reluctance to be around people to do so.”

Once in these areas, the animals may become trapped and unable to find a way back.

As for coyotes, if they have an opportunit­y to kill and eat a small animal, whether domestic or wild, they will.

“That’s what they do, that’s how they operate,” Mahoney said. “But let’s put this in perspectiv­e. Newfoundla­nd does not have a huge, high density population of coyotes.”

Mahoney says years of intense, well-publicized research demonstrat­es this.

“But we do have them and they sometimes come close to people, and undoubtedl­y they’ve taken some pets over time, but it’s not an everyday occurrence.”

Still, Mahoney says, if someone sees a coyote or their tracks in their neighbourh­ood, they should take every reasonable precaution.

He expresses a similar sentiment with regard to black bears in the springtime and early fall.

“The bears are always out there. There is always some chance the bears will come by any property, particular­ly if it’s by a wooded area,” he says. “But the actual number of cases overall is relatively small.”

 ?? SALTWIRE NETWORK FILE PHOTO ?? A coyote on the Bonavista Peninsula.
SALTWIRE NETWORK FILE PHOTO A coyote on the Bonavista Peninsula.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? Shane Mahoney, CEO and president of Conservati­on Visions Inc., says areas frequented by humans can be attractive to wildlife after heavy snowfalls.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO Shane Mahoney, CEO and president of Conservati­on Visions Inc., says areas frequented by humans can be attractive to wildlife after heavy snowfalls.

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