4.6 Article

Coyotes in New York City Carry Variable Genomic Dog Ancestry and Influence Their Interactions with Humans

Journal

GENES
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes13091661

Keywords

coyotes; urban; hybridization; admixture; genomics

Funding

  1. Theodore Roosevelt Grant from the American Museum of Natural History
  2. NSF [MRI-1949949]

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This study explored the genomic composition of coyotes in the New York metropolitan area and found a relatively small population of coyotes with moderate-to-high relatedness. Hybridization between coyotes and dogs was also detected, with one male coyote-dog hybrid and his offspring carrying significant dog ancestry. Genetic variations associated with human-directed hypersociability were found in these hybrid individuals and an unrelated coyote, suggesting that gene flow from domestic dogs could be an important factor in urban coyote populations.
Coyotes are ubiquitous on the North American landscape as a result of their recent expansion across the continent. They have been documented in the heart of some of the most urbanized cities, such as Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York City. Here, we explored the genomic composition of 16 coyotes in the New York metropolitan area to investigate genomic demography and admixture for urban-dwelling canids in Queens County, New York. We identified moderate-to-high estimates of relatedness among coyotes living in Queens (r = 0.0-0.5) and adjacent neighborhoods, suggestive of a relatively small population. Although we found low background levels of domestic-dog ancestry across most coyotes in our sample (5%), we identified a male suspected to be a first-generation coyote-dog hybrid with 46% dog ancestry, as well as his two putative backcrossed offspring that carried approximately 25% dog ancestry. The male coyote-dog hybrid and one backcrossed offspring each carried two transposable element insertions that are associated with human-directed hypersociability in dogs and gray wolves. An additional, unrelated coyote with little dog ancestry also carried two of these insertions. These genetic patterns suggest that gene flow from domestic dogs may become an increasingly important consideration as coyotes continue to inhabit metropolitan regions.

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