Territories and Population in San Francisco

Abstract: Key summary concepts and conclusions:

  1. Coyote population in San Francisco is self-regulated.
  2. There are just about 20 coyote territories in the city — I know of 15-17 (2 appear not to be full territories) and I’m allowing for a few more in this count [this map was updated 6-22-22]
  3. Territorial map update 6-22-22--
  4. Territories are owned and occupied by just one family.
  5. Outsider coyotes are kept out of these territories with few exceptions.
  6. Each territory within San Francisco is 1.5 to 2.5 square miles.
  7. Each territory has been stable since I first observed them, some since 2007, some since 2014, with minor exceptions. 
  8. Families consist of the alpha pair (Mom and Dad), pups born this year, and possibly a couple of yearlings from last year’s litter. There are variations, and a few exceptions as discussed below.
  9. This map and the work behind it has been assembled by me, visually, working alone up until this year, using my facial recognition of coyotes, and through documenting their behaviors and family life — I know each of these families and the relationships (and often ages) of the coyotes within the families, and can identify them — without tags or radio collars. Mine is a private passion. I have not been associated with any agencies, and I’m not paid for my work.
  10. I’ve been collecting scat since 2008 for DNA analysis at Dr. Benjamin Sacks’ Genetics Lab at UC Davis to confirm the relationships I’ve seen, dispersals, and origins. Last year my project was turned into a collaborative effort, joined by Monica Serrano who is analyzing the DNA, and Tali Caspi who is also collecting scat for a diet study: both students are PhD candidates working with or through Dr. Benjamin Sacks’ lab at UC Davis.
  11. **I want to emphasize that this posting is about what the situation is now and what it has been, I’m not predicting what it will be moving forward, but this is what we have as of Summer, 2021.                                

Coyote Territories and Population in SF

I keep hearing rumors and reading on NextDoor, that coyotes are “running around haphazardly and multiplying wildly” throughout San Francisco, that we are being “overrun” by them, that the city needs to “manage” them.

So I want to delineate what the coyote population situation is here in the city. I’ve defined most of the coyote territories here — and I’m likely the only person who has done so: all based on my own first-hand field research. I know and can identify the individual coyotes — their families, their relationships, and many of their ages and behaviors — that live on these territories.

Please note that “More sightings” do not necessarily translate into “more coyotes”.  I have studied the territories where people have claimed there are more and more coyotes, and there are not more. In all of them, I can identify the single family that lives there. Several factors enter into why people are having more sightings: First, increased awareness of coyotes in the city by everyone makes it easier to tune in to their presence. My best example of this is when I adopted my own first dog: suddenly there seemed to be hundreds of dogs which I had never seen before. Of course, there weren’t suddenly more dogs, I had just become tuned-into their presence. The same with babies: when I had my first kid, suddenly it seemed there were babies all over the place. Again, there hadn’t been a sudden change, but my perception had changed. A second factor is that Covid-19 has encouraged many more people to be out-of-doors, either around their homes or in the parks: the parks have been one of the few areas where people have been allowed to be during the pandemic and these areas are where the coyotes are, so there were more sightings with more people there to see them. Another factor, NextDoor spreads the word so more people now feel as though more are around. I recently read on NextDoor that coyotes are multiplying wildly in West Portal: not so. I know these coyotes well and there is still just the one family there, albeit they moved their denning area this year. During the early part of the pandemic, I read in the news that coyotes were suddenly congregating and howling on Greenwich Street: the one family that lives there, in fact, has been traveling this street nightly for years, and has been in the area at least since 2007. I can say this about a handful of places where there was a reported an “uptick in coyotes”. So, as I said, “more sightings” do not necessarily translate into “more coyotes.” I’ve been documenting SF coyotes now for 14 years, and I know the population on these particular territories. Lastly, as far as I have seen, as coyotes have become more and more used to the urban environment, although they retain their wariness, there are individuals who haven’t been keeping so carefully hidden as in the past, so there have been more opportunities for sighting them.

My awareness history: It’s by word of mouth and through the newspapers that I first learned about coyotes in San Francisco: 1) the first coyote was sighted in the Presidio in 2003 and 2) another was observed at Bernal Hill in 2004. It was not until 2007 that I actually met my first coyote — it was on Twin Peaks — that’s when I began my focused investigation into coyotes here in San Francisco. By the end of 2007 I had seen coyotes in many of the same territories where you see them today: at Lands End, the Presidio, Glen Canyon, North Beach and Fort Mason, Golden Gate Park, McLaren Park, Lake Merced. As I said, that was in 2007. As of today, those territories, as territories, have not changed. Their size and borders appear to have remained very constant, as has the the number of families on them: there is still just one family on each of those territories, though the specific families on some of those territories has changed over the years. In several of the territories, different generations of the same family still occupy that territory. So, these territories have been amazingly fixed since I first encountered them in 2007.

After 2007, I recognized even more territories: I don’t know when these became territories, but most of these, too, have remained stable and consistent since I first became aware of them in 2014. When instability did happen to the resident coyote family, it was because a coyote mated pair got old or there was weakness: they either were fought off by a younger, more energetic mated pair, or they simply left the territory which was soon filled by others, but the territory, as a territory remained stable as did the size of its population: one family. A rare boundary shift has occurred in one of the territories I’m following when a couple of adjacent territories had departures or deaths, and then there was some merging into what today is a standard family: an alpha pair, two yearlings and this year’s litter. 

So, within any area, where a human would notice them, there are not more coyotes, except for the accordion-like seasonal variations after pups are born, wherein afterwards the population on that one territory has shrunk back down to the alpha parents and possibly a yearling or two before the next pupping season which then produces, again in the next year, an expansion and then contraction in coyote numbers. The youngsters eventually and inevitably leave (disperse). Dispersed yearlings (and even elders) normally disappear forever from my visual radar — they appear to leave the city moving south, or be killed or die during the process, which is pretty much supported by a Presidio radio-collar study.  However, I’ve been able to follow a number of these dispersed individuals to final destinations within the city. These that remained within the city have moved into previously existing territories, either through a takeover battle usually from an older or weaker pair (say, if a mate died), by joining an existing territorial singleton (or divorcee in one case), or finding a vacated territory — one that had either been vacated by a death or abandoned. A wonderful example of all of these situations can be found in the situations of the litter born in 2017 in North Beach (see above link).

My work and methods: You might ask how I know this since I don’t use interfering and harmful gadgets such as radio-collars or colored tags, so I will briefly give a rundown of what I do and my methods.

I’m a self-taught naturalist and coyote specialist who’s been documenting coyote behavior here in San Francisco every day for the past 14 years. I’ve been called a pioneer in the photo-documentation of the lives of urban coyotes and capturing their intimate lives”. Specifically, I look at individual behaviors (what coyotes are doing and why), family life and interactions and structures, and their behavior towards pets and people. Then, in addition to their behaviors, I also look at their relationships and population dynamics which include mapping the extent of each family’s territory. To confirm my findings with hard data beyond my visual ones, I’ve been collecting scat since 2008 for DNA analysis at UC Davis, where Ph.D. candidates Monica Serrano and Tali Caspi are now collaborating with me in a city-wide population study.  I know most of the families and their members and relationships by sight and I’ve even been able to keep up with numerous dispersals to other locations within the city, though most dispersing youngsters, as I’ve stated, I never see again. These visual observations, as I’ve said, should pretty much be confirmed by DNA analysis from scat for which I’ve collected 500 samples so far.

I always begin my observations by figuring out and identifying who each coyote is as an individual: to do this I need to tell them apart. Each is unique as you can see in these photos below.  I spend a lot of time watching them and then examining the photos I take of them. So I am able to tell them apart by their faces. Coat markings are notoriously unreliable because they change too much with the summer shedding, however, distinctive silhouettes and even individual behaviors help distinguish them at a distance.

faces presentationSo each coyote face is unique, and the differences run deeper than their faces, into their various personalities. These become apparent by comparing and contrasting them. So, for example, some are much more curious and inquisitive, whereas others are more cautious and careful. Some are more playful, gregarious and love to tease, whereas others are more serious, watchful and withdrawn.

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Some are curious and inquisitive, others are more cautious and careful

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Some are more gregarious and playful and love to tease, others are more serious, watchful, and withdrawn.

Then, on top of personality differences, their different social situations or stations in life also distinguish them, and these evolve over their lifespans: 1) They all start out as pups, with siblings, in families, on territories, in highly social situations. Then most move on to become 2) interloping loners without territories and without social networks — it’s a complete change for them. Eventually 3) they find mates and become parents defending their own turfs, and 4) at some point, they get old and lose their mates and leave or lose their territories. Each social situation or station engenders different behaviors, all of which help to define who the coyotes are and to differentiate them.

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They all begin in highly social families with siblings, and then most move on to becoming interloping loners, without territories or social networks — it’s a big change for them.

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Eventually they find mates and become parents and defenders of their own territories.

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And then at some point they get old and lose their mates, and leave or lose their territories.

Above three rows of photos: coyotes have different social situations which help distinguish them.

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Family resemblances are strong: I have difficulty distinguishing this father and son

Of interest, nuclear family resemblances which we all are aware of in human families, also exist in coyote families! Similar and distinguishing characteristics and traits which often run in families have proven to be both an asset and a hindrance for me in identifying them. Family resemblances have helped me go back to families where I saw some amazingly similar facial configurations, allowing me to match up a coyote with his/her younger images. At the same time, these extremely close resemblances in siblings, especially from the same litter, have forced me to spend a lot of time pouring over photographs trying to tease out the defining differences! In some cases, it has taken a lot of time.

So, being able to identify each coyote visually is a huge tool I have for figuring out other things, including their population as a whole: structure and dynamics and mapping. Once I’ve come to know individuals and their families, I notice that only the coyotes of that one family, and no others, ever appear in any given area — this would constitute that family’s territory. I began seeing the extent and where they would go. I was able to tell who belonged where and their boundaries. Friends also occasionally sent me photos of coyotes seen in different places: it was always the same coyotes in the same places which confirmed what I was seeing.  I also have relied at times on automatic trail cameras at night, which involve another learning-curve for being able to identify individuals under infrared light. This is not easy to do. I place these cameras in strategic locations, such as by holes in or under fences, by watering areas such as dripping spigots, along coyote pathways which are easy to recognize as narrow grooves in the grass or terrain, and also, when/if the situation opportunistically presents itself, facing trash left by humans. By the way, food attracts many more rats, skunks, raccoons and crows than it does coyotes.

Again, the results of my findings show only the members of the one family in any of these territories: dispersing outsiders passing through are not common and can be identified as such. Territories and their populations, including seasonal pupping expansion and contraction, have been extremely stable, in spite of several coyote family disruptions that I’ve been able to follow.

During turmoil/disrupting times — such as times of dispersal of the alphas or injury or death of an alpha — there have been palpable upheavals at a site, but always, and soon, the population would settle back down and stabilize to what it had been before, or it would incorporate a change and then settle down. At the time of upheaval, there would be frantic energy and activity that was very different from everyday life, and frantic and increased vocalizations. It was easy to tell that something was going on if you were tuned into their everyday life.

Background coyote population history from other sources: For those who don’t know it, coyotes are native only to America. They inhabit every state except Hawaii. Below are three maps depicting their presence here over time [click each image to enlarge it for better viewing], or see Hody, J.W. & Kays R., “Mapping the expansion of coyotes across North and Central America”, Zookeys, 759:81-97, 2018.

There are 19 sub-species of coyotes running from the 35-55 pound Eastern Coyote, to a tiny 19 pound coyote in Florida which is sometimes though rarely melanistic or black, to our very own little western coyote weighing 25 to 35 pounds and averaging about 30 pounds in this area. [SOURCE: WIKIPEDIA]

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Eastern Coyote to the left; small coyote found in Florida to the right

It’s just during the last 20 years that coyotes have been moving more and more into cities and urban areas, where they claim territories in parks and open spaces, including neighborhoods, reservoirs, and the no-man-lands on the shoulders of freeways, including in San Francisco. I’ve written about how coyotes RETURNED to San Francisco — they are a native species which had been exterminated here in San Francisco in the 1900s. One old fellow I spoke to remembers when the city offered $4.00 for two coyote ears in the 1950s.

Back to their territories: Of prime importance, coyotes here in SF are not wandering around haphazardly nor multiplying wildly as some people claim. Here is my summary map, created for and first published in my presentations last year, showing HOW the population is divided and situated into discrete family units on distinct territories, with fairly exact borders. I will tweak it as needed. I have been able to delineate just about 20 territories (I’ve counted 14 and am allowing for several more) which cover the whole of the city. Nine of these territories I know extremely well, the ones I know less are proving to be very similar in their composition, dynamics, and extent. 

Territorial map update 6-22-22--

This is my map: I’ve poured heart and soul, work, time, energy and thought into it, mainly to show folks that coyotes aren’t running around haphazardly, and that the population is self-regulating/managing. Please give me credit if you share this information. ©

Of high interest is that all these territories, as territories, have been stable and unchanging since I first encountered them in 2007 and others in 2014, notwithstanding sequential families.  A couple have had minor alterations in their borders. But the coyotes themselves have also been amazingly stable, in spite of coyote family disruptions, or in one case, the movements of one gypsy family which included an unusual “divorce”. [Map updated 6-22-22: blue borders show territories that have changed substantially]

Only one coyote family, and no other coyotes, then, appear on any one territory, with rare exceptions, which I’ll explain below. The family members from that territory trek routinely through their areas which include the surrounding neighborhoods, as they, among other things, mark their territories in order to keep other coyotes out.

Rarely, I’ve seen a dispersing outsider passing through as quickly and inconspicuously as possible, and here below-left is a photo of a dispersing youngster (on the right) being repulsed by a territorial owner (on the left).

In addition to these territories, there are what I call temporary stopping-off spots where, over the years, I have seen any number of coyotes remain temporarily for a day, 2 weeks, 6 weeks, or several months before moving on. For some reason, these areas don’t seem to have sticking power, and the coyotes have always moved on after very short stints of stay there. Golden Gate Heights area has notably been such an area — almost a cross-roads — used by a number of dispersing coyotes over the years. I’m not saying this will remain so, but this is how it has been up to now.

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left: intruder being repulsed by a territorial owner; right: trekking the neighborhood to keep other coyotes out

In several rare instances, I’ve seen an individual remain longer. For instance, a dispersing youngster with a leg injury allowed to stay for several weeks before moving on. This individual was obviously not a threat to the resident coyotes and that may be why he was allowed to stay. I’ve also noticed a couple of what I call, “adoptions” by families of outside dispersing youngsters who don’t appear ready to make it on their own: eventually they move on. And I’ve seen a four-year old who seems to have been welcomed as a nanny to a large litter. All of these are rare exceptions to what I’ve seen.

The alpha/parents of each family, then, exclusively OWN their own vast territory and all the resources contained thereon, and they keep other coyotes out. This explains some of their antagonism towards dogs: it’s a matter of excluding them for the resources.This is what their territoriality is about. It’s this territoriality which limits their population in any given area. Territories I’ve worked out here in San Francisco run between 1.5 and 2.4 square miles. Please refer to the map above. The darker outlined territories on the map are those I know extremely well. 

The Alpha parent-pairs — the owners of the territories — provide long-term stability to the area’s population. I’ve seen some territories occupied for 12 years by the same pair or by their descendents who took over from them once they were no longer viable, whereas all their offspring inevitably and eventually move on. Eventually, even the old alphas may abandon their long-term homes, after losing a territorial battle, or even without such provocation — possibly because their reproductive years were over, or they died. Within a year, the territory has always been taken over by a new alpha pair, or in one case, a loner initially.

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The alpha pair own the territory and create stability in the population

SO, territoriality limits the population, but so does biology: the fact that only the two alphas in a family on any territory reproduce [though I have found one exception — a rare exception that seems to prove the rule]. I’ve seen  mothers wallop their yearling daughters to either disperse them or to instill fear so they won’t reproduce. Inter-coyote interactions can be intense — there is no question about any meaning and never room for interpretation — it’s a clear message. Younger females are therefore referred to as “behaviorally sterile”. Culling/killing/removing them disrupts this process, and they’ll produce more litters and will make up the difference (see FF Knowlton, 1972]. My own observation, aside from this documented biology, is that female offspring usually disperse before they become reproductively viable at two-years of age. So, coyote population is self-regulating.

Pups are born just once a year, in the springtime, which distinguishes them from dogs who can breed twice a year. Litter size averages 3 or 4, though I’ve seen as few as one and as many as seven here in SF, with a fair pup mortality lowering those numbers. They dig multiple dens which may lead folks to believe there are pups in each — but this is not the case. Most of these extra dens are reserved for emergency use. In different years, the same coyotes may use different parts or fragments of their territory for denning, as far away from each other as a mile, leading people to believe it’s another family when it is the same resident family or a single replacement family: this has happened at West Portal, in Glen Canyon/Twin Peaks/Mt. Davidson/Laguna Honda (this is all one territory), at Buena Vista, in McLaren.

Territory population then, like the bellows of an accordian, grows during the pupping season, but it shrinks back down to just the alpha pair, with possibly one or two yearlings lingering a little longer before moving on. Yearlings are defined as the pups born the previous year. Pups normally disperse sometime during their second year. They are either driven out by a sibling or parent, or they just pickup on their own and leave based on their own internal clock. Dispersal is a dangerous time for coyotes, due to cars (cars are their chief killers in cities), due to hostile coyotes, and due to unfamiliarity with the terrain. So, discreetly and mostly at night is when they search for new homes.

Here are some dispersal directions and final destinations within the city that I’ve tracked visually through facial recognition. Again, my direct visual observations should pretty much be confirmed by DNA by Dr. Benjamin Sacks’ lab at UC Davis. By the way, for a high number of the scats I’ve collected, I’ve seen which coyote produced them, so we’ll be able to match up exactly who is who. :))  The dispersal routes I’ve depicted are summary movements: in fact, dispersing coyotes may cover every inch of the city before moving on out or claiming their turf. Once they claim their turf, they stick to that area, without venturing out, and without allowing other coyotes in.

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Some dispersals and final destination within the city of San Francisco

In their quest for new homes, a few coyotes have remained in the city after fighting for a territory where they detect weak alphas: this happened last year at the Presidio. Or taking over a territory from a weaker loner as at Bernal Hill (though this was a temporary situation). And a lucky coyote just might find a vacated niche in the city, as happened at Bernal Hill six years ago. Those territories within the city which were moved into were only 4 or 5 miles from the coyotes’ birthplaces. However, many, or most of the dispersing coyotes, as I’ve said, appeared to move south and out of the city as noted by Presidio ecologists.

In conclusion, we appear to have the same territories today that we had in 2007 and those I discovered in 2014 have remained the same since that time. We have no more coyotes in the Presidio, Lands End, North Beach, Glen Canyon, Bernal Hill than we had back in 2007; we have no more coyotes at West Portal, Portola, Sunset, McLaren, etc. than we had in 2014 when I first became aware of them. Dispersing and interloping coyotes tend to be very temporary situations, with these territory-less coyotes much less secure and much more wary and evasive than the territorial ones which are the ones you are most likely to see. For instance, in 2019 the coyote pair seen regularly at Alta Vista and Lafayette Parks have not been seen in those parks since they claimed Lands End which they took over: that has been a territory since 2007. We have had other coyotes around Japantown and Grace Cathedral who will follow suit. Coyotes at the Sunset Reservoir are only seen there sporadically — I haven’t figured out their territorial boundaries yet.

*The images in this posting all come from my presentations where I first published this material.

© All information and photos in my postings come from my own original and first-hand documentation work which I am happy to share, with permission and with properly displayed credit©janetkessler/coyoteyipps.com.

19 Comments (+add yours?)

  1. lancer223
    Jul 14, 2021 @ 17:30:47

    Hi Janet, Thank you for another very interesting and educational article on our city’s fascinating coyotes. Your work helps educate the public on the need to preserve these wonderful animals. I hope the government leaders are reading about the importance of helping preserve these animals and their habitat and that we need an ecosystem that is filled with diverse flora and fauna. Every time the city cuts down a tree it diminishes their (and other animals) ability to coexist in this city in this time of climate change.

    Reply

    • yipps:janetkessler
      Jul 15, 2021 @ 21:52:42

      Thank you, Lance. Yes, I totally agree with you. I’ve been fighting for the city to leave up the underbrush and trees for over a decade. Glad you are part of the fight. :)) Janet

  2. james Mense
    Jul 20, 2021 @ 03:40:58

    I am interested in what your food habits study shows over time, particularly with regard to the effect of fluctuation in food availability on coyote population size. Here in western Colorado the rabbit population fluctuates wildly. I have seen a couple of years where you could see 100 or more rabbits per mile of road at night and then the next year, none and no tracks in the snow. This must have serious consequences for the survival of the pups and possibly the older adults as well.
    Coyote food availability in a city will probably be much more stable I would think.

    Reply

  3. yipps:janetkessler
    Jul 20, 2021 @ 04:11:07

    Coyotes are superb opportunists — they eat what is available and switch with no problem. You can see the seasonal changes in their scat. For instance, for several months they may eat nothing but fruit, and this may be even just one type of fruit! When and as other food sources become available, they may change over completely, and of course when the fruit season is over. I’ll be posting the results on this blog. The food study component of our collaboration is being done by one of the graduate students for her Ph.D., not by me. So glad you are interested! Janet

    Reply

  4. jeannie warner
    Jul 28, 2021 @ 19:41:52

    Janet, Can you go to BD in FB?
    There is some photos of a coyote here on the Hill. Some are saying it looks like it has mange.Too me it just looks young without a winter coat?

    Reply

  5. RSC
    Aug 31, 2021 @ 23:16:28

    I read your report about coyote territories within the City of San Francisco from beginning to end and found it fascinating. It is extremely well written and if and where academic ethical standards are maintained, should not only receive the credit you are due but also be extensively quoted. I am willing to bet that to some extent your marvelous photo-research and writing about coyotes is of such quality that it is engendering jealousy among academics. And there is no higher compliment than that. So well done!

    Reply

  6. Karen Moise
    Oct 11, 2021 @ 05:30:00

    Thank you Janet for all your fine science and care that you take with our coyotes.
    I refer everyone interested to your blog.
    Questions..Can you enlighten us on the family structures at Stern Grove? There are many coyotes that we see daily and undoubtedly a den (though much discussion of where). There may seem to be more sightings because of the east end being closed to humans and dogs after the water main broke and dumped at least 700,000 gal.down the hill off of Sloat. .
    Thank you so much

    Reply

    • yipps:janetkessler
      Oct 11, 2021 @ 06:10:54

      Hi Karen — First, thank you for your kind words and support. :)) The coyotes that appeared in Stern Grove until the end of July belonged to a family that has been wiped out by cars: that was the West Portal family. The dad was killed on July 1st, and the mom at the end of September. A couple of yearlings and pups remain, but I doubt they would be able to defend a territory from intruders. Empty niches are soon filled in the coyote world, and as far as I know, the new pair of coyotes have been there since mid-August: a male and a female. I’ve identified them but I have not seen any other coyotes.

      There is no den, but there probably will be one next year within the fenced off amphitheater area (not Pine Lake or the dog field) because dogs can’t get in there. As you know, dogs are coyotes’ nemesis. The fence, I was told, will be up for over six months as they take down trees damaged from the broken pipe flood, so it would be a good pupping area. But actually, these two may take over the denning site of the previous coyotes which is across 19th Street. We’ll have to wait and see.

      By the way, I identify all coyotes by their faces, so if you get any photos of them, showing faces, I can probably tell you who they are (in this case, the male or the female).

      Hope this helps!! Please let me know if you have more questions.

      Janet

  7. Krishnan R.S.
    Feb 05, 2022 @ 07:35:24

    What an awesome piece of unique research! Not very many can say they know their animals by _sight_. The map must have taken ages to compile. Is there seasonal movement among the separate groups? Also looking at diet of different groups would be interesting – maybe some are truly wild like in GG Park or McLaren park, and others are more urban-exploiters.
    Very interesting research. I hope you can get the city/GG Park people interested in this – so they can use it to better plan road/path layouts, and kids play areas etc.

    Also from your paper – “” In different years, the same coyotes may use different parts or fragments of their territory for denning, as far away from each other as a mile, leading people to believe it’s another family when it is the same resident family …”” . This is an interesting insight amongst others, and could calm down fears that the coyotes are “taking over the city” and other such dramatic statements.

    Reply

    • yipps:janetkessler
      Feb 05, 2022 @ 10:42:46

      Hi Krishnan — Thank you! No seasonal movement among the separate groups as such, rather, dispersing individuals explore the whole city and meet up with other coyotes that way. Once they have their territories, they pretty much stay put except in rare instances. Also, coyotes mate for life with few exceptions that I’ve seen. Many are killed by cars, and most seem to move south and out of the city because territories are pretty much already claimed in the city.

      Those that are left alone remain more *truly wild*, whereas those who are fed and then interacted with begin hanging around the feeding areas and feel more comfortable around people. I’ve been working with ACC to try and stop the feeding — people are attracted to the wildlife and think feeding is helpful when of course it isn’t.

      The City is alerted — through coyote behavior — by gardeners and walkers — of denning areas that might produce conflict with dogs and people, and those areas are cordoned off as much as possible and signs are put up. I did send that posting to ACC but was told, “we aren’t allowed to comment on it.”

      Yes, I’ve used my knowledge of the territories to let people know that we aren’t being overrun by coyotes.

      Janet

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  9. Diana
    Aug 10, 2022 @ 01:28:57

    Hi Janet, I just learned about your website! I was interested in learning more about the coyotes in [my park] but noticed that they aren’t listed on your map. There’s been a population living in the park since at least late 2019. I know there was a new litter born last month in the undeveloped area on Gough St. Do you track this group? Are they considered part of one of the other groups you’ve already documented on your map?

    Reply

    • yipps:janetkessler
      Aug 10, 2022 @ 05:04:18

      Hi Diana — I indeed might be missing a family or two, but that’s why I say there are “about 20 families” even though I actually only know about 17. However, I do know that a population doesn’t live in Lafayette Park, though coyotes do trek through that area, and I know for sure that there wasn’t a litter born there last month. I tried emailing you, but got no response.

      Coyotes, biologically, are born just once a year. They come into estrus in January and February and pups are born in late March or early April. They biologically won’t be born in July. I’m thinking that you might have *heard* coyote greetings? These are often high pitched and makes them sound like pups. This is the only explanation I can think of for your reporting pups born in June.

      The pair that passed through in 2019 now live elsewhere. I suppose it’s possible that they might occasionally still trek through the area. If you have photos showing their faces, I would be able to confirm or dispel this idea. Thank you for your interest and for contacting me. Hope we can discuss to find out more to find out what exactly you are seeing! Janet

  10. amativus
    Aug 10, 2022 @ 01:33:33

    Hi Janet – “For instance, in 2019 the coyote pair seen regularly at Alta Vista and Lafayette Parks have not been seen in those parks since they claimed Lands End which they took over: that has been a territory since 2007.” I’m trying to make sure I understand this comment, since I’m super interested in the coyotes in Lafayette Park. I live next to the park, and I’ve had continual sightings of coyotes in Lafayette Park from 2019 until now. In 2020 when the streets were quiet at night, the entire pack would go up and down Washington yipping, and I know there were newborn pups in early 2021. My most recent sighting was the last week of June at California and Laguna, and about 1-2 weeks later a litter was born in the undeveloped area [off of] Gough Street. Do you still consider their main territory as Lands End? Or are these new coyotes?

    Reply

  11. Trackback: Coyote at Fort Mason Community Garden - Jacques Fortier Photography
  12. Gene Vann
    Nov 25, 2022 @ 04:27:56

    I wish I had read this before running with my smallish 20 pound dog through Fort Mason early on Wed this week before sunrise…we were halfway through the path between Aquatic park and the side with the Safeway when he (my dog) started barking…I looked behind me, and saw two coyotes gaining on us. I was uncertain if they were friendly, so we booked down to the Safeway with me turning my head several times to make sure they were not going to lunge at my dog. Boy were they fast and elegant. Hopefully they were just curious, but I did not want to find out. Luckily I ran into a couple on a walk towards the end of the path who were heading into the Fort who provided some distraction. Definitely startled me. Made sure to take the business route when I went by Fort Mason on the return after the sun had risen. Was my instinct correct to be concerned for my dog, or did I miss out on an opportunity for my domesticated friend to connect with descendants of a distant common ancestor?

    Reply

    • yipps:janetkessler
      Nov 25, 2022 @ 04:38:34

      Hi Gene —

      You were right: keep your dog away from coyotes — the farther the better. In fact, with a 20 pound little dog, I would pick it up the minute you see a coyote and walk (don’t run) away from the coyote. Also, I would try not walking during twilight hours, either dawn or dusk, now that you know you live in a coyote area.

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