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January 22, 2025

San Francisco coyotes adapt diet to urban landscape

A coyote in San Francisco takes in a view of the city. Credit: Tali Caspi, UC Davis
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A coyote in San Francisco takes in a view of the city. Credit: Tali Caspi, UC Davis

As their traditional dining options dwindle and natural areas give way to restaurants, homes and sidewalks, the coyotes of San Francisco are shifting what they eat.

Scientists from the University of California, Davis, wanted to understand what San Francisco's coyotes are eating, and how their diet is changed and shaped by the city's landscape, which can vary from block to block.

in the journal Ecosphere, found that the number of restaurants and amount of pavement or "impervious surfaces" within the city heavily influenced what the coyotes ate. Coyote consumption of rats was highest where restaurant density was highest, and consumption of human-sourced food was highest in the most heavily paved parts of the city.

The findings can help inform and prioritize management strategies to protect native coyotes and reduce human-wildlife conflicts.

What San Francisco's coyotes are eating

So what are coyotes eating in San Francisco?

"A lot of human-provided food," said lead author Tali Caspi, a Ph.D. candidate with the UC Davis Department of Environmental Science and Policy and with the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine's Mammalian Ecology and Conservation Unit (MECU). "Chicken is a really big diet item; we found it in 72% of the scat samples analyzed in the study."

However, a natural prey source, pocket gophers, comprised the next most popular food source, found in about 57% of the scats collected, followed by pig (human-sourced) and raccoon (natural). While some people have expressed concern about coyotes eating cats, felines were rare in the dietary analysis, detected in 4.5% of samples.

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Scat and DNA analysis

To reach their findings, the authors collected more than 700 scat samples from throughout San Francisco between September 2019 and April 2022. They brought them to UC Davis for lab analysis at MECU, within the Veterinary Genetics Laboratory. Genotyping matched fecal samples to individual coyotes, while DNA metabarcoding quantified diet composition.

UC Davis urban ecology Ph.D. Candidate Tali Caspi collects coyote scout in San Francisco. Credit: Gayle Laird / California Academy of Sciences
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UC Davis urban ecology Ph.D. Candidate Tali Caspi collects coyote scout in San Francisco. Credit: Gayle Laird / California Academy of Sciences

Caspi notes that while the analysis reveals food sources, it does not differentiate between, for example, a backyard chicken, takeout from a dumpster, or chicken found in pet food.

The research also showed that coyotes in more urbanized parts of the city, such as Telegraph Hill near Coit Tower or Bernal Hill, ate more human-sourced food than coyote neighbors with more , such as in the Presidio or Golden Gate Park.

The scientists also observed that diets among coyote family groups were highly varied, while diets among members of the same family varied little.

"This study highlights the huge range of dietary and habitat affinities of coyotes as a species," said senior author Ben Sacks, director of the MECU at UC Davis. "That is a trait for which they are already well-known, but the study also joins a growing body of evidence pointing to relatively narrow proclivities of coyotes as individuals. They tend to stick with what they know."

Coyotes, native to San Francisco, rest and play at a park in the city. Credit: Tali Caspi/UC Davis
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Coyotes, native to San Francisco, rest and play at a park in the city. Credit: Tali Caspi/UC Davis
A coyote sits in the grass in San Francisco. Credit: Tali Caspi/ UC Davis
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A coyote sits in the grass in San Francisco. Credit: Tali Caspi/ UC Davis

Living among coyotes

Coyotes are native to San Francisco. Extirpated in the early 1900s, they returned in the early 2000s and now share space with more than 870,000 people on 47 square miles—the second-most densely populated major city in the United States—with water on three sides.

There are many things people can do to respectfully share space with coyotes and reduce human-wildlife conflict. This includes keeping cats indoors, not leaving pet food outside, securely disposing of food waste and, perhaps most importantly: "Don't feed coyotes," Caspi said. "There's a misconception that coyotes are starving and need our help finding food in San Francisco, and clearly they don't."

Coping with urban life

From in Portland, Oregon varying their song frequencies to cockatoos in Australia opening trash cans, the study joins the body of literature showing behavioral differences within cities among the same species.

"There are a lot of different ways to survive city life as an animal," Caspi said. "It speaks to the plasticity and resilience of these species to see all of these different strategies for coping with urban life."

Additional co-authors include Monica Serrano and Stevi Vanderzwan of UC Davis, independent researcher Janet Kessler, and Christopher Schell of UC Berkeley.

More information: Tal Caspi et al, Impervious surface cover and number of restaurants shape diet variation in an urban carnivore, Ecosphere (2025).

Journal information: Ecosphere

Provided by UC Davis

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Coyotes in San Francisco have adapted their diet to the urban environment, consuming more human-sourced food in areas with high restaurant density and impervious surfaces. Analysis of over 700 scat samples revealed that chicken was the most common food item, found in 72% of samples, followed by pocket gophers, pig, and raccoon. The study highlights the dietary adaptability of coyotes and suggests management strategies to reduce human-wildlife conflicts.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.