Coyote(s) Attack Man and 6 YO Boy in Chicago

Status
Not open for further replies.

hps1

Member
Joined
Dec 31, 2002
Messages
2,412
Location
Texas
Coming soon to a neighborhood near you? :)
Click link at bottom of article to watch short, interesting video.



Coyotes may have attacked Chicagoans twice this week after decades of leaving people alone


By
Hannah Knowles
Jan. 10, 2020 at 11:29 a.m. CST
Chicago is on high alert for coyotes after two reports of the typically reclusive animals attacking humans, possibly for the first time on record in the state — and officials may have the culprit.

Preliminary information “strongly” suggests that an injured coyote apprehended Thursday night is behind the rare incidents, a city councilman said. A 6-year-old boy was hospitalized Wednesday with a head wound after his caretaker kicked and screamed to get the animal off the child outside a museum, city authorities said, while a man showed up at another hospital the same day saying a coyote had attacked him from behind.

The aggression and a spate of coyote sightings — one of which sent some schools into lockdown Thursday, according to local news outlets — has raised concerns about an urban fixture that experts say usually poses little threat. Authorities scoured the North Side neighborhood of Lincoln Park for a particular coyote with a limp seen multiple times over the past week and warned residents to watch their small animals amid reported attacks on dogs.

Coyotes have coexisted with city-dwellers for generations, they emphasized, preying mostly on small creatures such as rats and rabbits. They are protected under Illinois law, and animal control personnel generally leave them alone. But the creature believed to have injured the 6-year-old was “not acting like a coyote,” said Kelley Gandurski, executive director of Chicago Animal Care and Control.

“It was brazen enough to interact with the child,” she told reporters at a Thursday news conference.

Chicago has not seen reports of a coyote attack on humans for decades, its management plan for the animal says. And Chris Anchor, a wildlife biologist with the Forest Preserve District of Cook County, told the Associated Press such an incident would be unprecedented across Illinois. Anchor cautioned, though, that DNA analysis has revealed that past reports of coyote bites actually involved dogs.

Authorities appear fairly confident that a coyote was behind the museum attack. Gandurski said her agency has yet to confirm the source of the bite that reportedly brought a man to Northwestern Hospital, and Chicago Animal Care and Control has not said whether the animal it tranquilized Thursday is linked to the reported incidents of aggression.

But Alderman Brian Hopkins, who represents Chicago’s 2nd Ward, tweeted Friday that the one coyote could be behind all the headlines. Authorities are waiting for confirmation from DNA testing, he said.

If authorities find an animal that seems to have “gotten too comfortable around people,” they will “humanely capture” it and consider relocating it, Gandurski said Thursday.

Foxes keep attacking this 88-year-old, and he strangled one with his bare hands

Rabies exposure is unlikely, added Thomas Wake, interim administrator of Cook County Animal and Rabies Control, noting that Cook County has not seen rabies in any animals except bats since 1954.

Once inhabitants of the West Coast, coyotes have spread to urban and suburban spots around North America. In the Chicago metropolitan area alone, Ohio State University researchers found a 20-fold increase in news reports of “human-coyote conflicts” from the 1990s to the mid-2000s.

“Perhaps as a result, homeowners in the Chicago metropolitan area have ranked coyotes as the wildlife species perceived as the greatest threat to human health and safety,” the researchers wrote in 2009, even though there were no verified attacks on humans on record. Coyote violence toward pets is rare but often covered in the news in another reflection of “escalating concern from the public,” they said.

Stanley Gehrt, one of the paper’s authors, told The Washington Post in 2018 that cities and towns should teach people how to live with coyotes rather than attempt to eliminate the wild creatures.

“Their first inclination, at least it used to be, [was] ‘We want to get rid of them, so how do we get rid of them?' ” he said. “Just to be clear, we’re not in the business of protecting coyotes or defending them or anything; we provide the best science that we can. What our science tells us is that you’re not going to be very successful at trying to remove them permanently.”

Here’s why there are so many coyotes and why they are spreading so fast

Chicago officials are advising residents to be mindful of food sources that could draw coyotes, such as unsecured garbage or pet food left out in a backyard. They’re also urging people to keep their small animals on a leash or under watch outdoors.

Those who see a coyote should call 311 rather than approach the animal, Gandurski said Thursday. If a creature gets too close, residents can try the “hazing” tactics used to scare off other predators such as bears, such as yelling and waving their arms.

Wednesday’s reported attack on a child unfolded outside the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum in Lincoln Park, she said. It’s not clear exactly what led the coyote to leave the grass next to a path to come face-to-face with the boy; the animal might have just been startled, Gandurski said.

Two Good Samaritans helped the boy’s caretaker fight the animal off, Gandurski told reporters. She said Thursday that the child is recovering and “in good spirits” at a hospital.

Authorities said there’s no evidence the area’s coyote population has grown in recent years, saying a slight uptick in sightings last year could stem from media coverage or duplicate calls.

Correction: An earlier version of this story identified rabbits as rodents.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/scie...e-this-week-after-years-leaving-people-alone/


Regards,
hps
 
It would be interesting to see, if after a DNA test, if the animal was a pure 'yote or a coydog. The statement about many of the dog bites thought to be coyote, but determined by DNA to be dog, may be a reference to feral dogs, and a source of breeding stock. Coydog behavior can vary greatly and some hybrids exhibit regression towards humans and some are very fearful, and will attack out of fear when surprised instead of running.....this corresponds with the statement in the article above, where the coyote may have been surprised. One would think a city, full of dumpsters, garbage, rats and feral cats would be a honey hole for adaptive species like coyotes. Like deer, the more they are around humans, the more they acclimate to being around them and identifying them with a food source(such as their garbage or their small pets). Seems almost every municipality, within their natural range, has them. One can drive around our town here at night and see them out in the streets, checking out the garbage folks put out the night before garbage day. Next door neighbor couldn't figure out what was happening to all the feral cats she fed on her porch till I showed her what coyote tracks looked like(altho live traps probably took as many as the 'yotes;)). Still for the present, the probability of being openly attacked by a singular, healthy coyote is probably so close to zero, it's to be considered as such.
 
As an ex-Chicagoan (thank God) I can hardly believe that people or governments would protect coyotes.

EDIT: I just thought about Chicago politics. The city government would do anything for votes. Heck, they even try to ban guns and gun stores there.
 
I live in a Chicago suburb, and it's not uncommon to see coyotes in my neighborhood. I have a 17 year old Springer/Beagle mix that would be unable to defend herself, so when I let her out I stay with her.
 
From the Illinois DNR website:
Coyotes are harvested during regulated hunting and trapping seasons. An average of 7,000 coyotes are harvested each year in Illinois. Approximately 75% are taken by hunters and 25% by trappers. The trapping season is restricted to the fall and winter months, while the hunting season is open year-round. A liberal hunting season allows landowners to remove problem animals without having to obtain a special permit. Biologists monitor the population to ensure that hunting and trapping do not negatively impact the population.

So not protected, you just have to have a hunting license. But, when searching for that I found a bunch of references to coyotes being "protected". One if these was on a DuPage county web site. Seems the info available is conflicting.
 
NYC is all excited about coyotes in Central Park. I've read that wolves control coyote numbers and when they being endangered, coyotes increased. Thus I suggest urban wolf packs be started. You might read Wolfen, BTW.

We had coyotes all over in my nice TX suburb.
 
We have a lot of coyotes around here. I see them during the day almost every week. They've chased my elderly dog a few times at night, probably trying to kill her. I know because I've seen them do it. I don't expect one to attack me but I'm usually prepared if I have to rescue my dog. They're getting pretty bold and numbers are increasing. I think that may be because pavement dwellers are moving here and the first thing they want to do is establish a flock of free range chickens. I hear roosters all around me and my neighbors chickens hang out in my yard. Chicken dinner just about any day of the week.

I don't have anything against coyotes or chickens but it makes for some interesting conversation with my neighbors. Hard to shoot the coyotes because the houses are all within 3 or 4 hundred feet of each other and brush is thick.
 
I live in a fairly liberal small suburb, but the Moms are posting on "Nextdoor" of being scared about possible coyote attacks on their children or pets. When some idiot offered to shoot them within the small city limits, I thought he'd get flamed, but the opposite happened, These liberal Moms were all for it, one even posted he should shoot them all.

Funny how thoughts change about hunting when it's to your benefit..
 
I live in a fairly liberal small suburb, but the Moms are posting on "Nextdoor" of being scared about possible coyote attacks on their children or pets. When some idiot offered to shoot them within the small city limits, I thought he'd get flamed, but the opposite happened, These liberal Moms were all for it, one even posted he should shoot them all.

Funny how thoughts change about hunting when it's to your benefit..

How else are you going to get rid of them. Animal control won't bother because they can't spend the time setting up a blind and calling them in. They're pretty easy to call into range with a predator call. Used to do it when I lived in AZ.
 
Coyotes were well established in northern Wisconsin in the 1960's when I lived there: (Any one ever hear of Brush Wolves?) They didn't have to migrate from the West Coast (or Canada) all of a sudden. Chicago Animal Control and public is in denial. As usual.
 
"Typically reclusive"?

Not in my experience. In residential areas where they experience no threat by humans, they're bold as brass. There were tales of a pair working neighborhoods over by Garden of the Gods where one would lure dogs off leash away from owners and then the two would attack it together. Animal control for them. I see them daytime barely skulking around the Springs. I've never seen or heard of them being aggressive to humans here but understand it's an issue in suburbia back east.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top