Researchers found that medium-sized carnivores like coyotes in northern Yellowstone National Park completely avoid cougars at all costs, while tracking wolves’ movements and whereabouts. Conversely, other intermediate predators, such as the red fox, often do the opposite.
These contrasting strategies demonstrate that the lives of the park’s small predators are a series of species-specific calculations about food, risk exposure, and ultimately survival.
Predator behavior in Yellowstone
Over three winters in Yellowstone, cameras and carcass records continued to show the same split in small carnivore responses to the park’s top hunters.
Wesley Binder, a doctoral student at Oregon State University (OSU), put these patterns together and documented that while coyotes shadowed wolves, foxes lined up more closely with cougars.
This distinction was made in the near term, with coyotes showing up as soon as they spotted a wolf, and foxes doing the same after a cougar came.
These repeated pairings proved that danger is not the only thing that organizes this food web, resulting in an article explaining what each predator relationship actually provides and threatens.
Hunger shapes the winter movement
Winter in Yellowstone’s northern mountains means fewer easy meals, especially for mesocarnivores, which are medium-sized predators that live below top hunters.
Global studies show that fished carcasses make up about 30% of these animals’ diets, so the risk is unavoidable.
Coyotes require more food than foxes, and research suggests they seek out larger carcasses due to winter starvation.
This difference helps explain why both species scavenge for food, but only one continues to gamble on the heaviest and most dangerous meals.
coyote chases wolf
Where wolves appeared, coyotes were much more likely to use the same ground, rising from 35% to 75% across locations.
After a wolf was spotted, coyotes were also more than twice as likely to show up within 24 hours.
The average delay after a cougar was detected was about 57 hours, the longest interval of any pair measured by researchers.
The wolves were clearly providing dangerous food, but the cougar looked more like an ambush than an opportunity.
fox chases cougar
Red foxes told a different story, frequenting areas where cougars migrate and doubling down when cougars are detected.
Where cougars lived, foxes used the area about 96% of the time, compared to 82% of the time elsewhere.
Foxes were most active after dusk, and cougars tended to migrate as well, so nighttime activity may have helped.
This overlap still carries risks, but foxes seemed able to continue to exploit it better than coyotes.
Separate 24 hour clock
The time of day was important because the four carnivores were not on the same schedule.
Wolves were most active near dawn and dusk, coyotes peaked around midnight, and foxes were mostly nocturnal.
Because cougars migrate primarily at dusk, they are more closely related to foxes than coyotes in their daily lives.
These mismatched clocks reduced some of the conflicts, but they also steered each species toward different debris and different threats.
Yellowstone Predator Encounter
The carcass was more than just a hunk of food. They were also the places where many deadly encounters occurred.
The researchers tracked the kills of 327 wolves and 257 cougars, recording which small carnivores came for food.
Coyotes appeared in 68% of wolf kills and 31% of cougar kills, far more frequently than foxes.
This pattern was costly, as 61% of coyote deaths by wolves occurred at wolf feeding grounds.
Different ways to kill predators
Wolves and cougars kill small carnivores in very different ways, and that difference helps explain the splitting behavior in the study.
Wolves typically kill coyotes near the carcass they are fighting over and often leave the carcass uneaten, indicating food defense.
In contrast, cougars killed and consumed coyotes away from elk and deer prey. This means that the prey was small predators.
Previous research on wolves and cougars by Binder’s team also found that rough cover helps reduce encounters with felines.
pressure goes downhill
This study suggests that pressure from one predator may not stop after a single collision, but may be transmitted down the ranks.
Coyotes have lived with new competition for decades since wolves were restored to Yellowstone in 1995 and 1996.
Coyotes then seem to push foxes into a different rhythm of life, one that better aligns with cougars.
“Carnivore communities are undergoing major changes in North America and around the world,” Binder said.
Managing Yellowstone Predators
Yellowstone is offering an unusually clear warning and guidance as wildlife conservation groups now face a growing number of areas where wolves and cougars are once again intersecting.
A recent study by the same Yellowstone program showed that cougars adjust what they hunt and where they move to avoid wolves.
Add in the new fox and coyote results, and the recovery plan begins to look more like mapping relationships than counting predator numbers.
“Our study provides insight into how the two apex predators compete, which can inform recovery efforts,” Binder said.
Yellowstone’s small predators weren’t just avoiding danger. They were reading about which top hunters left food, who guarded it, and when they guarded it.
In the spring and summer, some of these choices can be rewritten as rodents, insects, young deer and elk, and bears change the menu.
This research ecology.
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