🌿 African Painted Dogs Eat Fruit 🤓 A New Scientific Discovery

African painted dogs (Lycaon pictus) are often described as strictly carnivorous, highly specialized pack hunters that rely almost entirely on meat. But a recent field study from northern Botswana reveals something unexpected: African painted dogs have been observed eating fruit.

Researchers observed a denning pack in the Okavango Delta repeatedly foraging under jackalberry trees (Diospyros mespiliformis), carefully picking up fallen berries and swallowing them whole. This behavior was recorded over 20 out of 27 observation days, involving multiple pack members, often right before hunts.

This is the first documented case of frugivory (fruit-eating) in African painted dogs — a species long thought to be “hyper-carnivorous.”

Why this is very cool?

  • 🍓 It shows dietary flexibility, even in highly specialized predators
  • 🌱 It suggests painted dogs may play a small role in seed dispersal
  • 🐾 It challenges rigid ideas about what wild carnivores “should” eat
  • 🌍 It reminds us that animal behavior is shaped by opportunity, culture, and environment

Other canids like foxes, jackals, and maned wolves are known to eat fruit — and now African painted dogs join that list.

Nature is always more complex, adaptive, and surprising than we assume.

📖 Source

Claase, M.J. & McNutt, J.W. (2025). Frugivory in African wild dogs in northern BotswanaCanid Biology & Conservation, 28(4): 15–18. African_wild_dog_frugivory

Active Coyote Protection Petitions in Canada — Please Sign & Share

Coyotes continue to be targeted across Canada through hunting contests, culls, and policies that prevent injured animals from receiving care. Below is a list of current petitions supporting coyotes, each focused on coexistence, protection, and compassion.

Every signature matters. Please take a moment to sign and share.


🐾 Stop the Alberta Coyote Hunting Contest

This petition calls for an end to organized coyote-killing contests in Alberta, which promote cruelty and ignore science-based wildlife management.

🔗 https://www.change.org/p/stop-alberta-coyote-hunting-contest


🐾 Stop the Coyote Cull in Nova Scotia

Urges the province to stop lethal coyote control and instead adopt non-lethal, coexistence-based solutions.

🔗 https://www.change.org/p/stop-the-coyote-cull-in-nova-scotia


🐾 Allow Wildlife Rehabilitators to Help Coyotes in Nova Scotia

Asks the province to allow licensed wildlife rehabilitators, including Hope for Wildlife, to legally treat injured and orphaned coyotes.

🔗 https://www.change.org/p/ask-nova-scotia-to-allow-hope-for-wildlife-to-rehab-coyotes/u/33360323?utm_source=


🐾 End the Unnecessary Killing of Coyotes in Edmonton

Calls on the City of Edmonton to stop lethal coyote control and prioritize education, hazing, and coexistence strategies.

🔗 https://www.change.org/p/urge-edmonton-to-stop-the-unnecessary-killing-of-coyotes?utm_source=


🐾 Justice for the Liberty Village Coyotes (Toronto)

Demands accountability and policy change following the killing of coyotes in Toronto, and calls for humane wildlife management going forward.

🔗 https://www.change.org/p/protect-the-liberty-village-coyotes-in-toronto/u/33442313?utm_source=


🐾 End Wildlife Killing Contests (Coyotes Included)

Led by Project Coyote, this ongoing action works to ban wildlife killing contests across North America, where coyotes are the primary targets.

🔗 https://projectcoyote.org/protect/ending-wildlife-killing-contests/petition-ending-wildlife-killing-contest/


🐺 Why This Matters

Coyotes play a vital ecological role. Science consistently shows that killing them does not reduce conflicts and often makes things worse. Coexistence works. Education works. Compassion works.

Please signshare, and help give coyotes the protection they deserve.

💙🐾

🌿 Learn More About Coyotes

If you’d like to better understand why coyotes deserve protection, you may also enjoy this post:
10 Unique Facts About Coyotes — a gentle look at their intelligence, family bonds, and vital role in the ecosystem.

🔗 https://coyotepretty.ca/2025/08/05/10-unique-facts-about-coyotes/

🐾🚫 Alberta: End the Coyote Hunting Contest Now

In Alberta, a hunting contest has been announced that rewards participants with cash prizes for killing the most coyotes—including a category for children. Change.org+1
This isn’t wildlife management—it’s a massacre promoted as “sport”.

⚠️ The science shows this kind of mass killing doesn’t work. Disrupting coyote family units often leads to more conflict, not less. TheRockies.Life+1

We must stand up for compassion, science, and coexistence.
👉 Please sign the petition and share this link so more voices demand that Alberta stop these contests once and for all.
Sign here: https://www.change.org/p/stop-alberta-coyote-hunting-contest/psf/promote_or_share?message=sign-success

🐺💔 Nova Scotia: Let Wildlife Rehabbers Help Coyotes in Need

Coyotes are intelligent, social, family-oriented animals — yet in Nova Scotia, licensed wildlife rehabbers are not allowed to care for injured, sick, or orphaned coyotes. This means countless animals who could be saved are instead left to suffer or die.

This petition asks the Nova Scotia government to change this outdated restriction and allow trained, experienced rehabbers to provide proper care — the same compassion offered to foxes, raccoons, owls, deer, and other wildlife.

✨ Coyotes deserve humane treatment.
✨ Injured animals deserve a chance.
✨ The public deserves a compassionate, science-based policy.

Please sign and share the petition to help protect vulnerable coyotes and support the rehabbers ready to help them. Every signature matters. 💙🐾
👉 Sign here: https://c.org/BTCtfjY6fn

🐾 Justice for the Liberty Village Coyotes 🐾

Two innocent coyotes were shot and killed in Toronto’s Liberty Village — even though there were no confirmed attacks. 💔 These gentle beings were simply trying to live in the only home they knew.

Coyotes play a vital role in our cities — keeping ecosystems balanced and rodent populations under control. Killing them is cruel, unnecessary, and ineffective. There are always better, humane solutions like education, hazing, and protecting attractants. 🌿

👉 Please take a moment to sign and share this petition:
🔗 Justice for the Liberty Village Coyotes

Your voice matters. Let’s speak up for coexistence, compassion, and respect for our wild neighbours. 🐺💙

🚫🐺 Stop the Coyote Cull in Nova Scotia


Coyotes are a vital part of our ecosystem — intelligent, family-oriented animals who keep nature in balance. But right now in Nova Scotia, they’re facing cruel and unnecessary culls.

👉 Killing coyotes doesn’t solve “problems.” Science shows it often makes things worse by breaking up family groups and causing populations to rebound even faster.

Instead of fear and cruelty, we need coexistence and compassion. 💚

✍️ Please take a moment to sign and share this petition:
🔗 Stop the Coyote Cull in Nova Scotia

Every signature matters — your voice can help protect coyotes and push for humane solutions. 🌎✨

🐾 Protecting Canada’s Coyotes: Why We Must Act Now

Two coyotes standing alert on a snowy landscape, Parc Omega, Montebello, Québec, Canada.


I just added my name. Will you stand with me?

I signed the petition “Urge Edmonton to Stop the Unnecessary Killing of Coyotes” (you can sign it too: https://chng.it/f57xx4jnw5)
Every signature matters. Because coyotes are not “pests” — they’re vital, fascinating, and misunderstood creatures. Here’s why you should care — and act.


Why Coyotes Are So Important

1. Guardians of ecosystem balance

Coyotes help keep rodent populations in check, prevent overgrazing, and control smaller predators. Their presence helps maintain healthier, more balanced ecosystems. When we remove them, unintended consequences ripple outward.

2. They’re native to Canada

Coyotes are part of Canada’s natural heritage. They’ve adapted and evolved here, playing an essential role in the food web across provinces. They’re not foreigners to our lands — they belong here.

3. Lifelong bonds & devoted parents

Coyotes are often monogamous and mate for life. They raise their pups together, teaching them survival skills, defending their territory, and caring for their family. Their parental devotion is beautiful and should be respected, not disrupted.

4. Killing doesn’t solve problems

Research shows that mass culls often backfire — new coyotes simply migrate into vacated territories, creating more conflict, not less. Non-lethal methods like hazing, public education, habitat modification, feeding bans, and tolerance are proven, humane alternatives.


Why Edmonton Needs to Do Better

  • Over the past three years, an estimated 75 coyotes have been killed in Edmonton — about 25 per year. (Change.org)
  • The city currently contracts with an exterminator to carry out culls. (Change.org)
  • This approach is both morally troubling and ecologically damaging.
  • Instead, the city should partner with organizations like Coyote Watch Canada and adopt humane management strategies. (Change.org)

What You Can Do Right Now

  1. Sign the petition (if you haven’t already): https://chng.it/f57xx4jnw5
  2. Share this post far and wide — on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, email, word of mouth.
  3. Write to local & city officials — let Edmonton know you oppose lethal culls and support humane alternatives.
  4. Support wildlife organizations working to protect coyotes and educate communities.
  5. Stay informed & spread knowledge — when people understand how essential coyotes are, policies can shift.

We have a chance — a responsibility — to protect these beautiful, wild beings. To respect their place in our landscapes, their deep family bonds, and their role in nature’s harmony.

If you value compassion, respect for wildlife, and ecological balance, please sign and share the petition now: https://chng.it/f57xx4jnw5


🐾 Stand Up for Louisiana’s Coyotes (and Armadillos too!)


Louisiana is trying to pass a ban that would make it illegal for licensed wildlife rehabilitators to help coyotes when they’re injured, orphaned, or sick. This means that coyotes like Ti Loup and Koa—two little orphans currently being cared for at Geaux Wild Rehab—would never have had the chance to receive the love, medicine, and second chance they deserve.

👉 You can see them here: Ti Loup & Koa TikTok video. These pups are alive and thriving because of wildlife rehabilitation. Without it, their story would have ended in suffering.

But if this ban goes through, no future coyote in Louisiana will get that chance.


Why This Matters

  • Coyotes are North America’s native wild dogs. They play a vital role in keeping ecosystems balanced by controlling rodents, cleaning carrion, and adapting to fill niches left empty by other predators.
  • Rehabilitators see very few coyotes each year. In 2024, only six coyotes were rehabbed in Louisiana. That’s such a tiny number compared to the population—it’s not causing problems.
  • It’s unfair and inhumane. If a coyote is hit by a car, poisoned, trapped, or orphaned because of human activity, it deserves care. To deny them help is cruel.
  • Education works better than bans. Teaching people how to coexist peacefully with coyotes reduces conflicts far more than preventing their care.
  • Armadillos would also be affected. The proposed rule would ban rehab for them too, leaving injured armadillos without care as well.

How You Can Help 📝

We need your voice to stop this.

  1. Sign & Share the Petition:
    ✍️ Oppose the Ban on Louisiana Coyote Rehabilitation
  2. Send an Email:
    Urge Louisiana officials to vote NO on banning coyote rehabilitation. Tell them coyotes and armadillos deserve compassion, not cruelty.
    • Email addresses are listed in the petition description. Even a short, heartfelt message makes a difference.
  3. Spread the Word:
    Share Ti Loup and Koa’s story. Post the petition. Let people know this fight is about protecting our native wildlife.

Closing Thoughts

Coyotes are survivors—resilient, intelligent, and deeply misunderstood. But even survivors need help sometimes. Please stand up for Ti Loup, Koa, and all the coyotes who may come after them. They are not “outlaw quadrupeds.” They are family to the land, and they deserve a chance to heal.

🐺💙 Please, sign, share, and speak up. For the coyotes. For the armadillos. For a more compassionate world.


🚨 Save Louisiana’s Coyotes + Wildlife Rehab! 🐾

Geaux Wild Rehab has started a petition to stop a new rule that would ban the rehabilitation of coyotes and armadillos in Louisiana. This means if one of these animals is injured, orphaned, or in need, licensed rehabbers wouldn’t be able to help them anymore. 😢

Coyotes are amazing ecosystem helpers 🌏they keep rodent populations in check, clean up carrion, and play an important role in balance. And wildlife rehabbers are trained, compassionate people who give injured animals a second chance. 💕

👉 Banning their care doesn’t solve “conflicts.” It only takes away compassion.

✨ How you can help:

✅ Sign the petition ➡️ Sign here
✅ Share it with friends, family, and on social media 📲
✅ Speak up for wildlife 🐺🐾


Every signature makes a difference. Let’s protect the right to care for these beautiful wild beings. 🌿💚