Study: Eastern wolves are hybrids with coyotes

ALBANY, N.Y. – Wolves in the eastern United States are hybrids of gray wolves and coyotes, while the region's coyotes actually are wolf-coyote-dog hybrids, according to a new genetic study that is adding fuel to a longstanding debate over the origins of two endangered species.

The study is unlikely to impact the management of the endangered red wolf in North Carolina and the eastern Canadian wolf in Ontario, but it offers fresh insight into their genetic makeup and concludes that those wolves are hybrids that developed over the last few hundred years.

Some scientists have argued that the red wolf, Canis rufus, and the eastern Canadian wolf, Canis lycaon, evolved from an ancient eastern wolf species distinct from the larger gray wolf, Canis lupus, that is found in western North America.

Wolf experts who adhere to that theory say the new study is interesting but falls short of proving anything. They say it doesn't explain why hybrids appear only in some places and note that western wolves don't hybridize with coyotes but often kill them.

In the study, published online earlier this month in the peer-reviewed journal Genome Research, 16 researchers from around the globe led by Robert Wayne of the University of California-Los Angeles, used information from the dog genome — the animal's entire genetic code — to survey the genetic diversity in dogs, wolves and coyotes.

It was the most detailed genetic study of any wild vertebrate species to date, using molecular genetic techniques to look at over 48,000 markers throughout the full genome, said Roland Kays, curator of mammals at the New York State Museum and a co-author.

In a previous study of the dog genome published last year in the journal Nature, a Wayne-led international team of scientists reported that domestic dogs likely originated in the Middle East and shared more genetic similarity with Middle Eastern gray wolves than any other wolf population.

The recent study showed a gradient of hybridization in wolves.

In the West, wolves were pure wolf, while in the western Great Lakes, they averaged 85 percent wolf and 15 percent coyote. Wolves in Algonquin Park in eastern Ontario averaged 58 percent wolf.

The red wolf in North Carolina, which has been the subject of extensive preservation and restoration efforts, was found to be 24 percent wolf and 76 percent coyote.

Northeastern coyotes, which only colonized the region in the past 60 years, were found to be 82 percent coyote, 9 percent dog and 9 percent wolf.

In a study co-authored by Kays last year in the journal Biology Letters, museum specimens and genetic samples were used to show that coyotes migrating eastward bred with wolves to evolve into a larger form that has become the top predator in the Northeast, filling a niche left when native eastern wolves were hunted out of existence. The hybridization allowed coyotes to evolve from the scrawny mouse-eaters of western grasslands to robust deer-hunters in eastern forests.

The genetic techniques used in the recent study allowed researchers to estimate that hybridization, in most cases, happened when humans were hunting eastern wolves to extinction, Kays said.

"The few remaining animals could find no proper mates so took the best option they could get," Kays said.

L. David Mech, senior research scientist at the U.S. Geological Survey's Northern Prairie Research Center in St. Paul, Minn., and founder of the International Wolf Center in Ely, Minn., is skeptical of the theory that eastern wolves are hybrids.

"How do you reconcile this with the fact that gray wolves typically don't breed with coyotes, but kill them?" Mech said. "We have no records in the West of wolves hybridizing with coyotes, even in areas where single wolves looking for mates have dispersed into the middle of coyote country."

Mech also questioned whether the study tested enough Canadian and North Carolina wolves and whether those specimens were true representatives of those populations.

Although 48,000 genetic markers sounds like a lot, it's actually a relatively small part of the entire genetic code, Mech said. So the evidence of a unique eastern wolf ancestor could simply be in another part of the code that wasn't analyzed, he said.

Several researchers who consider the eastern wolf species separate from the gray wolf weighed in recently in an online discussion of the new study.

Brent Patterson, a genetics researcher at Trent University in Peterborough, Ontario, called the study "an important step forward." But until more samples are analyzed, the hypothesis that a North American wolf evolved independently from the gray wolf was still viable, he said.

"It's an academic issue," Mech said. "It's nice to know what the origins are from the standpoint of curiosity, but from a conservation standpoint, it shouldn't make any difference."

David Rabon, coordinator of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Red Wolf Recovery Program in North Carolina, said the federal agency has taken the position that the red wolf is a unique species that warrants protection. The new study, while interesting, won't likely change management decisions, he said.

Follow Yahoo! News on , become a fan on

60 Comments

  • 13 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    Eric1 Tue May 31, 2011 12:55 pm PDT Report Abuse
    This theory has been around for at least 30 years.
  • 3 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    Matthew Wed Jun 01, 2011 08:09 am PDT Report Abuse
    The coyotes I've seen wild in the northeast are larger than the wolves I've seen in the zoo. The coyotes I saw in california were tiny in comparison, not too much larger than the red fox we have out here. My non scientific input: The western wolves kill western coyotes because they can. The eastern coyotes mate with the eastern wolves because they can. Dogs will be dogs.
  • 2 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    me 13 hours ago Report Abuse
    Near Cleveland Ohio the last few years, we've had several hikers killed by coyotes. Also lots of dogs have been killed and badly injured in their own backyards. It's becoming a problem. They even posted warning signs on our hiking trails about the dangers of small dog's barking attracting the coyotes. I've seen a few in broad daylight.
  • 2 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    sillyonthehilly Wed Jun 01, 2011 06:36 am PDT Report Abuse
    gray wolves are said to be isolated in the Northern Michigan Pen.,... but there have been sightings . We saw a gray wolf running across the road in Newago County, by Crouton Dam (Muskegon River). And one hunter told me he saw a wolf when we were camping on state land south of Mackinaw city, about 50 miles. The coyotes are very aggressive down here. We can hear packs of them on a kill with deer. At one time we have a group of coyotes behind our area in the wooded section and another neighbor on the other side heard them fighting a large cat (puma or bob cat). of which was screaming. Pumas (cougars) and bob cats are seen in this area of Mid Michigan also and one picture was taken of a bob cat by a motion activated camera. the animals go were the food chain is.
  • 9 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 1 users disliked this comment
    tadchem Wed Jun 01, 2011 05:30 am PDT Report Abuse
    The key to sorting out the dog-wolf-coyote question is to recognize that they are all simply different *breeds* of canine that have not quite diversified enough to produce genetically incompatible species.
    I have witnessed deadly hostility between breeds among dogs, so the deadly rivalry between grey wolves and coyotes is not unexpected, even though they may be reproductively compatible.
    The key to interbreeding is simply whether the female is receptive when she encounters a male of another breed.
    Sex trumps war even in canines.
  • 1 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    meow 21 hours ago Report Abuse
    I wish i can see a real wolf and a coyote, we don't have it here in the Philippines...i can only watch it in the movies and magazines....
  • 17 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 6 users disliked this comment
    Hunter Tue May 31, 2011 12:46 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Everything and everybody is a MUTT!
  • 9 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 3 users disliked this comment
    Glowby Tue May 31, 2011 06:43 pm PDT Report Abuse
    L. David Mech sounds like he's struggling to stay in denial of the findings. 48,000 genetic markers ought to be a sufficient quantity to get a good estimate. He seems to be arguing from incredulity. (Maybe there's a little professional jealousy too.)

    It's cool how this study shows speciation in slo-mo action, and generates intelligent hypotheses from the selective forces at play for future research.
  • 17 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 7 users disliked this comment
    Will Hunt Tue May 31, 2011 02:45 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Your mother in law is a good indicator of what your wife will look like some day. If your mother in law looks like the Chupacabra you may have erred in judgement in selecting your spouse.
  • 8 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 3 users disliked this comment
    Lester Wed Jun 01, 2011 04:50 am PDT Report Abuse
    Cross breeding with dogs is common, most of the wolves in Texas have been breeding with wild dogs for many years, and coyotes have been breeding with dogs in Kansas for a very long time.
    This is only news to the scientists who sit in their offices and don't get outside in the real world.
    Years ago I heard one of these experts say that wolves were extent in America while I could hear them howling outside my house at night.

Post a Comment

Sign in to post a comment, or Sign up for a free account.