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A new species is evolving right before our eyes — an ultra-successful mix of wolves, coyotes and dogs...

A new species is evolving right before our eyes -- an ultra-successful mix of wolves, coyotes and dogs
rawstory.com
"Over time, wolves began mating with their new, genetically similar neighbors.

The resulting offspring — which has been called the eastern coyote or, to some, the “coywolf” — now number in the millions, according to researchers at North Carolina State University.

Interspecies-bred animals are typically less vigorous than their parents, The Economist reported — if the offspring survive at all.

That’s not the case at all with the wolf-coyote-dog hybrid, which has developed into a sum greater than the whole of its parts.

At about 55 pounds, the hybrid animal is about twice as heavy as a standard coyote, and its large jaws, faster legs and muscular body allow it to take down small deer and even hunt moose in packs, and the animal is skilled at hunting in both open terrain and dense woodland.

An analysis of 437 hybrid animals found that coyote DNA dominates its genetic makeup, with about one-tenth of its DNA from dogs, usually larger dogs such as Doberman pinschers and German shepherds, and a quarter from wolves.

The animal’s cry starts out as a deep-pitched wolf howl that morphs into higher-pitched yipping — like a coyote.

Its dog DNA may carry an additional advantage."

[rawstory.com]

AprilFlowers 6 Jan 1
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4 comments

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1

Maybe they will do something about the overpopulation of deer.

1

Good post. The reason for the success of the hybrid may be due the closeness of the three species phylogenitically (biologically). The DNA of these species are more genetically similar than say, donkey and horse. This combination produces a Jenny are a mule, which in general are sterile at birth. Or a lion and a tiger, which produces a liger

1

Very interesting. I think I’ve seen some of these new animals.

There are hybrid humans all around me, some of whom seem very superior in ways.

1

I've seen some big coyotes in the mountains. Now I wonder.

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