The Howling: Why You’re Hearing Coyotes This Month

I stepped outside last night to take some glass bottles to the recycling bin. The evening was clear, cold and seemingly silent. I hurried with my task, no wanting to linger in the chill. And then a howl rippled through the air. Coyote. The sound echoed through the neighborhood, carrying clearly from a nearby hillside.

I stopped and enjoyed the vocalizations. The long howls were interspersed with sharp yips, sounding like multiple animals. It lasted for several minutes.

I never tire of that sound, no matter how many times I hear it. And this time of year, I enjoy the coyote concert frequently.

Coyotes are one of the most vocal mammals. And they’re also now found widely, so if you live in North America, there’s a good chance that you have some roaming near you.

You can hear them at any time of year, but you may notice increased activity in February and March. And, if you’re like me, you’ll find the howling particularly resonant on a cold winter’s night. Here’s what’s going on.

Photo © Ian Shive

The Pair Bond

Quite simply, it’s breeding season. While the exact timing varies, depending on geography, coyote breeding season generally occurs between late January and March. Coyotes are generally monogamous, forming strong pair bonds for several years. Some researchers state that the coyotes will remain together until one of the pair dies.

Coyotes are also territorial. The pair howls and yips to let other coyotes know that they have an established territory and not to intrude.

Coyote researcher Brian Mitchell describes the sounds you’re likely to hear at this time of year:

“Group yip-howls are produced by a mated and territorial pair of “alpha” coyotes, with the male howling while the female intersperses her yips, barks, and short howls. “Beta” coyotes (the children of the alpha pair from previous years) and current year pups may join in if they are nearby, or respond with howls of their own.”

Mitchell also notes that other nearby pairs may then respond, announcing their own territories. At such times, it can sound like a cascade of howls across the landscape.

According to Mitchell, this is not the only time of year that coyotes establish their territorial boundaries. The pups are born later in spring, and will form a loose family group. A pack of coyotes howling is an iconic sound of the American West, and it likely serves dual functions. Mitchell writes:

“The group yip howl is thought to have the dual purpose of promoting bonding within the family group while also serving as a territorial display. In other words, the coyotes are saying “we’re a happy family, and we own this turf so you better keep out.” In a sense, the group howls create an auditory fence around a territory, supplementing the physical scent marks left by the group.”

Photo © Dan Dzurisin / Flickr

Song Dog

Howling may be the most recognizable coyote vocalization, but these canids actually have a wide repertoire of sounds. (One of the animal’s more endearing nicknames is “song dog”). Researchers generally identify 11 vocalizations that serve a variety of functions, from alarm to warning to socialization.

There is much we don’t understand about the coyote’s calls. Their “language” is likely far more complex than we can comprehend. Researchers like Mitchell note that coyotes have accents that vary geographically and even among family groups, much like humans. And coyotes can recognize another coyote by its distinctive call.

Even though coyotes are one of the most common and adaptable predators in the world, there is much we don’t understand. And there’s also a lot of contradictory information – and complete nonsense – written about coyotes.

There are two reasons for this. Coyotes are relentlessly persecuted throughout their range. A lot of people kill or attempt to kill coyotes, and oftentimes they present their own opinions as fact.

For instance, people often grossly overestimate the number of coyotes in an area. When a couple of coyotes begin calling, their sounds can vary rapidly in pitch and sequence, which can sound like a lot more coyotes than actually are there. Coyote howls often echo against hillsides, compounding the confusion.

This actually may provide a benefit to coyotes. As they establish their territory, sounding like a big pack may deter other coyotes from entering the territory.

I have often heard local hunters describe areas “absolutely overrun with coyotes,” based solely on the howling they’ve heard. Most likely, they were fooled by just a few animals.

Photo © Dru Bloomfield / Flickr

A Flexible Lifestyle

I suspect there is another reason for a lot of the contradictory information about coyotes and their behavior. It’s because coyotes behave differently depending on habitat, interactions with humans and other factors.

Coyotes are one of the most adaptable predators. They are found in the Idaho wilderness near my home, but also can live in the midst of large cities like Chicago and Los Angeles. They live in farm country, in suburbs and in urban parks.

The reason that they can thrive in so many different habitats is that they are very flexible and adaptable. They will change their diet and their habits to fit the environment.

So a coyote’s territory and pack bonds are likely different on the public lands of the Rocky Mountains than they are in a suburban neighborhood.

One of the differences some researchers have recognized is that urban coyotes likely vocalize less. I live in an area surrounded by a large wildlife management area and a river greenbelt. I hear coyotes regularly. If you live in a city, you may not hear coyotes as much – but that doesn’t mean they’re not there. They have just found it easier to survive by being quiet.

If you do happen to find yourself in some wide-open spaces this month, step outside in the night and have a listen. You may enjoy one of the great sound shows in nature, the chorus of yips and howls. The coyote survives and thrives despite us, and its howling serves as a reminder to the wildness still in the world.

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108 comments

  1. Kathleen Juracka says:

    Beautiful! Thank you

  2. William Nusz says:

    I love coyotes. Live in Colorado which has a lot of public land over run by sheep on public land who destroy everything.

    Hopefully coyotes will eat more sheep.

    Good article-

  3. Tim A Stone says:

    Coyotes won’t “overrun” an area. If they find food difficult to find, they move on.

  4. Sharon Hartley says:

    Matthew, I have been hearing much coyote song every night after going to bed. Thank you for this informative article about my interesting coyote neighbors.

  5. Diana says:

    Kane County Utah wants to allow night hunting of coyotes, skunks and a few other mammals. There will be a meeting Tuesday morning, I believe. Is there anything you can do to help us speak out against this?

  6. Sally Schnettler says:

    Men in my area brag about killing the coyotees – often with their hunting dogs helping them.
    Farmers (me too) have lost their barn cats – probably to coyotees.

    So, I have mixed emotions about this wild animal.

  7. A Barrow says:

    Thank you so much for sharing your words and insights. I miss the coyote song if I don’t hear it for awhile; we live in W Mass near Mt Tom where they have plenty of space to roam around. We delight in seeing their tracks in the snow, even though we never see them. Lovely creatures, they are.

  8. Kent Zado says:

    Great article. We have some bonding pairs in the nature reserve near our home in Calgary. They will often come out an have a look at my dog and I, but as long as we keep calm, so do they. Beautiful and misunderstood animals. I love ’em.

  9. Maryr brown says:

    We reside in an area close to lake placid, n.y. and frequently. Enjoy the coyotes midnight songs. Their sounds are so special. As is the call of the loon heard during summer and spring months….a. Gift!
    W e always have a. German shepherd. In our family and for years. all of them have enjoyed joining in the howling. We. have acres fenced and the coyotes honor our territory Never. Entering the property even if the gate has been mistakenly left open.
    Animals can co,exist with. Guidelines! Yes.. mare

  10. Erin H says:

    Great article. It is a very sad and distressing thing when a pet is lost to a coyote. Coyotes don’t differentiate prey and consider our domestic pets as a food source if they can obtain them. Coyotes aren’t good or bad, they’re just trying to make the best living they can in the territory they’ve got. It’s up to us to take steps to make resources unavailable so coyotes won’t be attracted. Coyotes are often able to jump fences and the best way to protect pets in fenced yards is to coyote-proof the fence by making it at least 6 feet high with coyote rollers on top. Check out the roller bars here: https://coyoteroller.com/

    1. Kathleen Juracka says:

      The rollers, what a great design!
      With 7.6 billion of us and growing by the minute, we need inovative ways to allow wildlife to survive with us, for at least a few more decades.

  11. DJ says:

    I hate them, they just got my small dog in my fence yard around noon time in Los Angeles!!!

    1. Sally Schnettler says:

      This is why I have mixed emotions! I now have a small dog and let her out very early to do her job; always, always worried about a coyotee getting her. (She runs right back into the house after her job is done) I have a friend who brags about his guns and hunting dogs for hunting coyotee ( and deer). Makes him feel like a man since there is no other way for him.

  12. Josie stern says:

    You should check out my propery. They kill the wildlife. Howling every evening.

    1. Kathleen Juracka says:

      They Are the wildlife!

  13. Diane Birney says:

    Great article. I live in Dutchess County, NY and I am thrilled to hear a coyote serenade now and then near my home. I have even had a few face to face encounters with them; however; they usually run off faster than it takes to blink! The youngsters tend to need a “shoo!” though as they are more curious – especially of ouside cats! (Which cats are now “inside” cats.)

  14. Elizabeth King says:

    I live in rural Maine and live hearing them at night or seeing them trotting across our back field. They are a gift to us. I feel no malice toward them and am saddened that so many people hate them.

  15. Mike Hazel says:

    Can the coyote be domesticated like a dog?

    1. Tom Harper says:

      We had a high-content coy-dog for 13 years and, while they can be trained, they don’t have the same behaviors as domesticated dogs. They bond intensely with one person, they’re very skittish around others, they’re strangely quiet (it can be unnerving for folks used to dogs barking and whimpering) and they have physical abilities, like tree-climbing, that are more cat-like than dog-like. And there is no fence that can stop them if they want to see what’s on the other side.