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coydogs are kina neat kina like a chupacabra part fact part fiction a female coyote will stand and let a dog breed her if there are no male coyotes around when they started returning east they did this a lot but once the yote population has been established this does not happen after a number of generations has passed the dog is pretty much bred out except for the weird colors . We have red wolves just south of me we get strange colored yotes here mostly reddish . lots of wonderful publications FWS has on file. this worries me more then coydogs
http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/55669...k-after-canadian-singer-taylor-mitchell-death
http://wolfcrossing.org/2007/11/14/hybrid-wolf-coyotes-protected-under-the-esa/
http://www.ncseagrant.org/home/coastwatch?task=showArticle&view=listarticles&id=663ALLIGATOR RIVER TODAY
Despite some resistance, the red wolf recovery effort is a success on many fronts, according to David Rabon, coordinator of the Red Wolf Recovery Program at USFWS. Growth has been stable, if slow, for North Carolina's red wolves. Today, there are 110 to 120 wolves in the total wild population.
"The initial obstacle was the fact that the wolves had been raised exclusively in captivity," Rabon explains. 'There were no wild wolves. The wolves had to leam to be wolves again, to be wild again."
Another obstacle came in the form of coyotes. During the 1990s, coyotes began spreading into Eastern North Carolina and mating with red wolves. By the end of the decade, hybridization with coyotes became the greatest issue facing red wolf recovery.
Because red wolf packs feature a single, monogamous breeding pair, scientists couldn't remove a coyote once it was established as a red wolfs mate. Rather, USFWS began sterilizing coyotes. Although this intervention limits the number of potential wolf offspring, it protects the species integrity of red wolves.