Blue-Eyed Coyote, Point Reyes National Seashore

This is a photo of a coyote that has blue eyes.

Blue-eyed Coyote, Point Reyes National Seashore

I saw that blue-eyes coyote again with the damaged left eye a week ago.  The last time I photographed him was about two months ago.  He seems to be doing well.  I’ve wondered if he is the only blue-eyed coyote at Point Reyes.

This is a photo of a blue-eyed coyote in Point Reyes National Seashore.

Blue-eyed Coyote, Point Reyes National Seashore

With his left eye the way it is, there’s no chance of thinking that he might be a second blue-eyed coyote there.

The Unfortunate Death of a Mountain Lion Cub in Colorado

A puma mother lies on ground with two of her 8 to 12 week old cubs.

A mother puma rests in Torres del Paine National Park with two of her three young cubs.

I’m sure everyone saw the headlines a couple of weeks ago about a trail runner in Colorado who was attacked by a mountain lion which he then killed with his bare hands. He was lauded as a hero.  His “incredible” feat was reported on favorably by all the media.

But something didn’t sound right to me.  Male mountain lions weigh between 120 and 220 lbs, averaging 137 lbs.  Females generally weigh between 65 and 140 lbs, averaging 93 lbs.  Wikipedia.  Plus, they are much, much stronger than we are on a pound for pound basis.  I just couldn’t picture how a human could kill one without a weapon.  I could see a human putting up a good fight and the animal deciding to stop the attack and leave, but killing it with one’s bare hands?  No way I thought.  I decided to keep an eye out for any further reports.

As the details came out over the next two weeks it turned out the mountain lion was a male cub of just 35 to 40 pounds.  And the runner killed it by standing on its neck until it suffocated.  USA Today.   I’d like to see someone try to stand on the neck of an adult male mountain lion weighing the average 140 pounds or so.  A necropsy report later confirmed that the mountain lion was a male, only four or five months old, weighing 35 to 40 pounds. The cat had limited fat, indicating it was hungry but not starving.  Time.

The story goes on the report that this cub had two siblings that were later captured by Colorado Parks and Wildlife.  They were captured because Parks and Wildlife concluded the mother was dead because she didn’t come for the other cubs over a few days.  The cubs have been placed in a care facility until they are old enough to fend for themselves (although that is somewhat questionable without a mother to teach them to hunt).  They weren’t old enough to survive on their own.

In my opinion, the real story is that a mountain lion female with three young cubs had died.  While I don’t know how the mother died, the odds are that it was killed by a human, possibly a rancher nearby or the  Federal Government’s Wildlife Services agency which exists primarily to kill predators for ranchers and farmers.  To me, it’s not a hero story; it’s a sad story of a little mountain lion cub who would be alive today if its mother hadn’t been killed.

As I was writing this and searching for facts of the event I found a well-written blog where the writer posted a photo of a cub she was holding about the same size and age as the one that was killed.  It looks pretty small compared to an adult.  An incredible heroic feat?  Not compared to being attacked by an adult of about four times the size of the cub.  For a link to the blog click here.

Why did the cub attack?  I don’t know for sure, but most likely it was very hungry because its mother was no longer feeding it and it just reacted on instinct for food.  If it had been a deer walking by, the cat would probably have attacked it as well – and failed.

Blue-eyed Coyote, Point Reyes National Seashore

There was a photo in the news several months ago about a blue-eyed coyote at Point Reyes. The photo was taken by my friend, Daniel Dietrich who runs Point Reyes Safaris, or one of his clients.  I look for it when I’m out there.

Just for the fun of it, a few days days ago I modified a photo of a coyote I photographed recently by giving it blue eyes.  See my post a few days ago.

I think I’ve seen “Blue Eyes” once or twice, but I never made a positive ID because I never got a close enough view of it.  As luck would have it, recently I did.  See the photos below.  The first image was taken at relatively close range.  The second photo is just a crop of the first image. It seems to have some damage to its left eye.

In the third photo the coyote was a bit farther away and it becomes harder at that distance to tell for sure if the eyes are blue.

Looking back at the blue-eyed coyote that I created in Photoshop a few days ago, I have to say that without having the real one as a reference, I came pretty close to the blue eyes of the real blue-eyed coyote.

There is some discussion of blue-eyed coyotes on the internet.

I hope you’ve read this far because this whole discussion of the coyote’s eyes made me realize something I never realized before. I think I’m right about this because I just went through all the bird and mammal eyes on my website and the human eye is totally different from the eyes of all those birds and animals. I didn’t find any bird or mammal with any part of the visible eye that was white. They were all either all black or they had black pupils inside irises that covered all of the rest of the visible portion of the eye. Our irises are tiny in comparison to theirs and most of the visible portion of our eyes are white. Why is that?  So, I googled it.  Here’s one explanation:  “Only humans obviously show the whites of their eyes, making it easier to communicate and deceive at a glance”.  For more click here.

This is a photo of the face of a blue-eyed coyote.

Blue-eyed Coyote, Point Reyes National Seashore

This photo is a close shot of a blue-eyed coyote.

Apparent Injury to Left Eye

This is a distance sot of a blue-eyed coyote, Point Reyes National Seashore.

It’s difficult to see blue eyes at normal viewing distance.