Wolf? Coyote? Coywolf? Understanding Wolf Hybrids Just Got a Bit Easier

Gray wolf, red wolf, coywolf, coydog. Wild canine taxonomy can be confusing -- and often comes with a heavy helping of folklore. But what does the science really say?

In a Nutshell: Eastern wolves, often considered to be a hybrid of gray wolves and coyotes, actually represent a separate species, revealed by the latest genomic research published in Biology Letters. The paper also helps clarify the hybrid origins of other wild canines, including Eastern coyotes and Great Lakes wolves.

Unlike Little Red Riding Hood, most of us can tell the difference between a wolf and Grandmother. But beyond that: our wolf identification skills are probably not as good as we think.

Consider the names bandied about the popular media today: gray wolf, red wolf, coyote, coywolf, coydog. Which of these are species? What is the real deal with hybrids? What does it mean for conservation?

The answers are not simple, in large part because the topic of wolves and wolf hybrids often resides more in the realm of folklore than biology. A good way to pick a fight in any bar in rural America is to start offering opinions on “Canadian gray wolves” or “coywolves” or “eastern coyotes.”

What does the science say?

A new paper in the journal Biology Letters uses the latest genomic techniques to give a clearer picture of canid taxonomy and hybrid origins. The researchers used a technique called restriction site association DNA marker sequencing (RADSeq) and genomic simulations to resolve the hybrid status of wild canines in North America.

It’s only in the last ten years that these techniques have been developed to be able to understand complicated biological systems — not just in humans and fruit flies, but in wolves and all kinds of other creatures.

A whole new set of questions can now be answered with these genomic techniques – including questions about wolf hybrids.

Even the paper’s authors acknowledge that canine taxonomy can be, well…complicated.

“The genetics has gotten very complicated,” says the paper’s lead author, Linda Rutledge, post-doctoral researcher and instructor at Trent University, Ontario. “It’s very difficult for people to read genomic papers and understand them.”

So what should wildlife conservationists know about this research? Here are some key points.

Despite being often overlooked, Eastern wolves are a separate species.

The paper notes two prevailing evolutionary models for animals in the Canis genus in North America. One model maintains that there are two species of wild canids: the gray wolf (Canis lupus) and coyote (Canis latrans). Their comingling has also resulted in various hybrids.

The second adds a third species to the mix: the Eastern wolf (Canis lycaon).

For years, many have considered the Eastern wolf to be one of the hybrids of gray wolves and coyotes. This has led to confusion among policy makers and the general public.

The genomic research in this paper found no evidence that the Eastern wolf is a hybrid.

It’s a separate species.

Disagreement over the eastern wolf’s evolutionary history may be its biggest threat.

As geneticists debate, policy makers and wildlife managers base their decisions on confusing information. Or, more often: they feel paralyzed to make decisions.

Eastern wolves, though, need action. Their core population is centralized in Algonquin Provincial Park in Ontario. For many years, the animals could be legally shot as soon as they left the park.

That’s changed: there is now a buffer zone around the park that prohibits all hunting and trapping of wild canids.

But beyond that, protection of eastern wolves in Ontario is largely on paper only. Why? The eastern wolf is difficult to tell apart from the coyote. And coyotes can be hunted or trapped year round, without bag limits.

So it’s essentially open season on eastern wolves in potential expansion areas.

The paper’s authors hope that establishing the evolutionary history of the eastern wolf, demonstrating it is a species and not a hybrid, will lead to better protection.

“The eastern wolf needs a recovery plan that extends into dispersal areas, including Quebec,” says Rutledge. “There is wonderful habitat for them to disperse into; there just needs to be protection so they are not killed as soon as they disperse out of the buffer zone.”

A Wisconsin coyote. Photo: Matt Miller/TNC
A Wisconsin coyote. Photo: Matt Miller/TNC

Eastern coyotes and Great Lakes wolves are hybrids.

The genomic testing revealed three species of canids, but there are also hybrids arising from these species encountering each other.

Here is what the paper argues about hybrids.

Eastern coyotes are hybrids of western coyotes and eastern wolves. This is the animal often referred to as the coywolf.

Following extermination of wild canids in the eastern United States following European colonization, western coyotes began colonizing the habitat – and bred with eastern wolves when they encountered them on their expansion.

Great Lakes wolves are hybrids of gray wolves and eastern wolves.

Red wolves are likely the same species as eastern wolves.

The researchers did not test for red wolves for this paper, but relied on a body of work conducted previously.

These animals, once found in the southeastern United States, became critically endangered in the 1900s, and the last wild animals were gathered and placed in captive breeding facilities.

The captive breeding of a small population may have caused their genetics to diverge from eastern wolves. They have been since been reintroduced in sites of the Southeast – where they breed readily with coyotes, perhaps further confusing the genetic situation.

“The attention and controversy around wolves is all cultural, not biological,” says coauthor Paul Hohenlohe, assistant professor of biology at the University of Idaho. “But the reality is the biological situation is also complicated. It’s not static.”

The role of canids in ecosystems is as important as their evolutionary history.

Arguments about wolf management and conservation can quickly descend into trying to reconstruct the past. What wolf really belongs in the East? Were gray wolves there? Are Canadian gray wolves the same as Rocky Mountain wolves?

Historical records don’t help. European explorers were not taxonomists, let alone geneticists. They called things by confusing and inconsistent names: brush wolf and gray wolf and black wolf could all mean the same thing, or be perceived as different species.

And so obsessing over what canine belongs where can seem a futile quest.

Lead author Rutledge proposes another way for conservationists to approach this: focus on the ecosystem not the species.

“Conservation focuses on a very species-specific model,” she says. “Agencies often want to know first whether a species is taxonomically valid, but that may not be an efficient way to approach conservation in general. Our research shows that what species are can be very difficult to pin down.”

“But we know that ecosystems need top predators,” she continues. “That is so clear in the case of over-abundant white-tailed deer in eastern forests. The eastern wolf could play that role, if it could disperse.”

In other words: Let’s quit trying to make wolves fit into our neat little taxonomic boxes. Let’s focus instead on how to protect and restore their critical role as top predators.

Published on - Updated on

References:

The paper: Rutledge LY, Devillard S, Boone JQ, Hohenlohe PA, White BN. 2015 RAD sequencing and genomic simulations resolve hybrid origins within North American Canis. Biol. Lett.11: 20150303. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2015.0303

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50 comments

  1. heather floyd says:

    i have just one question why has it been that the past 10 years our eastern coyotes have been 55 pounds and now are are as big as 130 pounds and they now have more of a meaner and more confident personalty you used to be able yell at them then they would run away but now they attack people and chase cars on the road

  2. frank costello says:

    i have a all white coyote in my backyard at 4.00 afternoon they start yelping frank on cspe cod

  3. Patricia Southern says:

    The 21st century has become the crossroad for all endangered species we need to protect them with all our might. Our lives will be empty without them.

  4. Christine Schadler, M.S. says:

    I write from New Hampshire. Hybrid canids are highly adaptable, like our eastern coyote. With 8 – 30% wolf DNA they may evolve to occupy the niche of the eastern wolf here. The fact that both red and eastern wolves breed with coyotes can be viewed not as species loss but as the birth of ever more adaptable creatures. In the south, coyotes become more wolfy. In the north, wolves becomes more coyote-like. West of Algonquin Park eastern coyotes breed and mate with eastern wolves,
    producing ever more adaptable canids. We are witnessing a natural response of the ever adaptable canid to expanding humans, changing food sources and changing climate. Its all wonderful. The term species is on a wild ride and we are all witnesses!

  5. linda brockett says:

    yes while they are beautiful from a distance, NOT SO MUCH LIVING 100FT. FROM MY HOME.

  6. casey black says:

    the coywolf was bred in captivity and released, like the liger, they don’t happen in nature without human interference. when wolves were reintroduced to Yellowstone 80% of the coyote population was reduced by the wolf. they are natural enemies and do not breed in the wild. I know of a person in new Brunswick that was breeding wolves to coyotes. why, because people are stupid. if wolves were to breed with coyotes why has it only happened in this region of north America.

  7. Wayne Blackmon says:

    im interested in doing an audio -Telephone_ interview with Matt. Our comonay – WIlderenss North of Thunder Bay Ontario – published a monthly newsletter with text, photos, and Podcasts,
    We wish to learn more about the wolf -coyote – populations in our boreal forests, home to our lodges and outpost camps.

    Wayne Blackmon Wayne@dwildernessnorth.com 918-521-6900

  8. Margie Manthey says:

    Super interesting information and very helpful in helping to navigate through the confusing tangle of coyote / wolf / hybrid monikers. The closing remark was spot on. Thanks for a great read.

  9. som sai says:

    Obviously some restoration is needed. I recommend the Rock Creek National Park, it worked in Yellowstone and Jamie Rapaport Clark who was so instrumental in that restoration also has an office nearby, she can help again.

  10. Meghan Ruggieri says:

    Here’s a question. Are the Buffalo Wolf and the Great Plains Wolf the same one and the same?

    1. Hi Meghan,
      The many names used for wolves through history can make this really difficult to determine. If you read some old hunting stories, black wolves are treated as a separate species (they’re not). Terms like “buffalo wolf” and “Great Plains wolf” were used commonly, but inconsistently. Since this was before scientists could use genetic markers, and even many field observations were inconsistent, we may never know what subspecies were here or not. I’m afraid it’s a confusing picture. A lot of early naturalists, hunters and explorers used a “folk taxonomy” to name things. This can make determining the historic range of wolves, coyotes, etc really problematic. I am glad that these researchers are helping to untangle the picture.