High-cat diet: urban coyotes feast on pets, study finds | Environment | The Guardian
urban coyotes feast on pets, study finds | Environment | The Guardian
Itβs a common story in southern California, and one now backed up by research: a new study by the National Park Service has found that 20% of urban coyotesβ diets is made up of cats.
Once restricted to the western plains, coyote populations are surging in cities across the US. They are master adapters who have learned to survive in urban environments β a recent study found coyotes present in 96 out of 105 cities surveyed. But many communities are struggling to figure out new ways to deal with predators in their neighborhoods.
In Los Angeles there were 16 coyote attacks on humans in 2016, up from two in 2011. For small pets, the danger is even greater. Reports of coyotes attacking cats in the daytime β even in Hollywood β have popped up on social media. A neighborhood in Culver City recorded 40 pet deaths from coyotes in just six months last year. βCoyotes are the top β besides us β in urban landscapes,β says Justin Brown, a biologist for Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area who conducted the study.