Coyote vocal communication and its application to th…
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transparent Author: Mitchell, Brian Reid.
transparent Title Statement: Coyote vocal communication and its application to the selective management of problem individuals / Brian Reid Mitchell.
transparent Production: 2004.
transparent Description: x, 197 leaves : charts ; 28 cm
transparent Citation/References: References: Mitchell, B.R. 2004. Coyote vocal communication and its application to the selective management of problem individuals. Ph. D. dissertation, University of California, Berkeley.
transparent Summary, Etc. Note: Summary: Livestock depredation by coyotes severely affects ranchers, and the existing evidence implicates breeding coyotes in the majority of livestock losses. Management approaches that target these problem individuals will be the most effective way to reduce livestock losses. This dissertation examines coyote long-range vocal communication and the likely usefulness of recorded vocalizations for selective coyote control. The information content of barks and howls is important because coyotes may recognize vocalizing individuals. This could cause coyotes to respond differently to playbacks depending on the individuals used. It is also important to understand how vocal characteristics change over biologically relevant distances, since these changes provide insights into the practical communicative significance of long-range vocalizations. I investigated whether coyote barks and howls were individually distinctive using 293 barks and 280 howls from 7 coyotes. Barks and howls were individually specified: discriminant analysis correctly classified the barks of 5 coyotes 69% of the time, and the howls of 6 coyotes 79% of the time. Howl characteristics did not degrade with distance, and discriminant analysis was 75% accurate at assigning howls recorded at multiple distances to 6 individuals. Bark characteristics were unstable with distance and it is unlikely that barks could be used for individual recognition. Howls and barks probably serve separate functions: howls are optimized to convey information, while barks are suitable for attracting attention and for facilitating distance estimation. Effective playbacks should incorporate both types of vocalization so that the complementary information they contain is available to listeners. A year-long experiment investigated the selectivity and efficacy of a variety of acoustic stimuli for calling coyotes. Transients rarely responded vocally, and territorial coyotes commonly responded to group coyote vocalizations. During optimal conditions, vocal response rates were over 55% for territorial males, 42% for alpha females, 11% for beta females, and below 4% for transients. Territorial coyotes were more likely to approach playbacks than transients, and coyotes more readily approached group howls than other playback types. When conditions were optimal, approach response rates were 47% for alphas, 49% for betas, and 27% for transients. These results suggest that playbacks can be used for selective coyote control.
transparent Dissertation Note: Ph. D. University of California, Berkeley, Environmental Science, Policy and Management 2004
transparent Bibliography Note: Includes bibliographical references.
transparent Local Note: NWRCCatalogISO2​0250428
transparent Additional Physical Forms: Online version: Mitchell, Brian Reid. Coyote voacal communication and its application to the selective management of problem individuals. 2004 (OCoLC)94430153​2
transparent Elect. Loc./Access: ProQuest, Abstract http://gateway.​proquest.com/op​enurl?url_ver=Z​39.88-​2004&rft_val_fm​t=info:ofi/fmt:​kev:mtx:dissert​ation&res_dat=x​ri:pqm&rft_dat=​xri:pqdiss:3146​952
transparent Index - Genre/Form: dissertations. aat
transparent Academic theses fast
transparent Academic theses. lcgft
transparent Thèses et écrits académiques. rvmgf
transparent Name Added Entry: Michael Jaeger.
transparent Response of territorial dominant coyotes to broadcasted howling and the factors which influence it.
transparent Title Added Entry: Documenting Impacts, Developing Control Strategies, and Applying Knowledge of Predator Behavior and Demographics to Protect Livestock and Natural Resources.

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