4.3 Article

The natural history and ecology of melanism in red wolf and coyote populations of the southeastern United States - evidence for Gloger's rule

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BMC ZOOLOGY
卷 7, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40850-022-00138-5

关键词

Canis latrans; Canis rufus; Coyote; Gloger's rule; Habitat selection; Melanism; Red wolf

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资金

  1. Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources
  2. Georgia Department of Natural Resources-Wildlife Resources Division
  3. South Carolina Department of Natural Resources
  4. School of Renewable Natural Resources at Louisiana State University
  5. Weyerhauser Company
  6. Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources at the University of Georgia

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This study investigated the relationship between the occurrence and maintenance of melanistic phenotypes in Canis taxa and morphometrics, habitat selection, and survival rates. The results showed no correlation between morphometrics and pelage color. However, melanistic coyotes and hybrids had higher annual survival rates and exhibited a preference for areas with dense canopy cover and wetlands. These findings suggest that Gloger's rule is applicable to canids inhabiting regions with dense canopy cover and wetlands.
Background Gloger's rule postulates that animals should be darker colored in warm and humid regions where dense vegetation and dark environments are common. Although rare in Canis populations, melanism in wolves is more common in North America than other regions globally and is believed to follow Gloger's rule. In the temperate forests of the southeastern United States, historical records of red wolf (Canis rufus) and coyote (Canis latrans) populations document a consistent presence of melanism. Today, the melanistic phenotype is extinct in red wolves while occurring in coyotes and red wolf-coyote hybrids who occupy the red wolf's historical range. To assess if Gloger's rule could explain the occurrence and maintenance of melanistic phenotypes in Canis taxa, we investigated differences in morphology, habitat selection, and survival associated with pelage color using body measurements, GPS tracking data, and long-term capture-mark-recapture and radio-telemetry data collected on coyotes and hybrids across the southeastern United States. Results We found no correlation between morphometrics and pelage color for Canis taxa. However, we observed that melanistic coyotes and hybrids experienced greater annual survival than did their gray conspecifics. Furthermore, we observed that melanistic coyotes maintained larger home ranges and exhibited greater selection for areas with dense canopy cover and wetlands than did gray coyotes. Conclusions In the southeastern United States, pelage color influenced habitat selection by coyotes and annual survival of coyotes and hybrids providing evidence that Gloger's rule is applicable to canids inhabiting regions with dense canopy cover and wetlands. Greater annual survival rates observed in melanistic Canis may be attributed to better concealment in areas with dense canopy cover such as coastal bottomland forests. We suggest that the larger home range sizes of melanistic coyotes may reflect the trade-off of reduced foraging efficiency in lower quality wetland habitat for improved survival. Larger home ranges and differential use of land cover by melanistic coyotes may facilitate weak assortative mating in eastern coyote populations, in which melanistic animals may have lower success of finding compatible mates in comparison to gray conspecifics. We offer that our observations provide a partial explanation for why melanism is relatively low (< 10%) but consistent within coyote populations throughout southeastern parts of their range.

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