‘Prey-switching’ blamed for death of Toronto woman mauled by coyotes 13 years ago
HALIFAX — A new and unusual theory has emerged about the coyotes that killed a young Toronto woman on a Nova Scotia hiking trail 13 years ago.
Researchers say that on Oct. 27, 2009, when singer-songwriter Taylor Mitchell set out alone in Cape Breton Highlands National Park, resident coyotes had adapted to a limited food supply by learning how to hunt and kill moose — a trait believed to be extraordinary among these “generalist carnivores.”
Stanley Gehrt, lead author of a paper recently published in the Journal of Applied Ecology, said that with the park’s coyotes preying on such a large animal, it stands to reason they would be less inhibited about killing a human.
“When (coyotes grow) used to taking a 700-pound animal, and you have a single woman walking by herself … it seems perfectly natural to assume that they simply saw her as a novel food item,” Gehrt, a professor at Ohio State University, said in an interview.