By Jennifer Welsh
Humans are no
newcomers when it comes to messing around with nature. While we haven't
created Frankenstein's monster yet, what we do messes with the natural
world. One recent example is the creation of the coywolf — a hybrid of
the coyote and the wolf that is also known as the Eastern coyote.
These animals have a completely
new genetic make up: Their genes are about 1/4 wolf DNA and 2/3 coyote
DNA, the rest is from domesticated dogs. They were created when
previously separate wolf and coyote populations merged in the land north
of the Great Lakes.
Here's the coyote, which traditionally maxes out at 75 pounds and has pointier features, and readily populates cities:
According to the New York Times' Moises Velazquez-Manoff:
"[The coywolf] can be as much as 40 percent larger than the Western
coyote, with powerful wolflike jaws; it has also inherited the wolf's
more social nature, which allows for pack hunting."
Specifically, this genetic
combination of the two animals seems especially well suited to its
northern habitat — better suited than either parent species. The wolf
genes allow the coyote to take down bigger prey, while the coyote genes
let them adapt to cityscapes and other metropolitan areas.
To study the hybrids better, scientists went ahead and made some 50/50 hybrids in the lab, mating female coyotes with male grey wolves.
That's not exactly like the wild coywolves, but it's similar. And gives
scientists a better idea of how successful a mating between the two
species would be. While two pregnancies didn't result in live offspring,
one litter created six puppies.
Here's the result:
So, how did these hybrids come to be? Well, as Velazquez-Manoff writes in the New York Times magazine:
The emergence of the Eastern
coyote, however, shows how human activity can break down the barriers
that separate species. Perhaps the most obvious way in which humanity is
altering the natural world is through climate change. The Arctic, where
its effects are especially evident, is warming between two and four
times as fast as the rest of the planet. Spring thaws now arrive weeks
earlier; winter freezes come weeks later. Shrubs are invading
once-barren tundra. Animals at high latitudes — where related species
tend to have diverged more recently and can therefore interbreed more
easily — are shifting their ranges in response to rising temperatures
and melting sea ice. As they do, they may encounter cousins and
hybridize.
This is what a wild coywolf looks like. This one was spotted in West Virginia.
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