COYOTE AMERICA

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Mon, 07/18/2016 - 10:15am to 11:00am
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Coyote

With its uncanny night howls, unrivaled ingenuity, and amazing resilience, the coyote is the stuff of legends. In Indian folktales it often appears as a deceptive trickster or a sly genius. But legends don't come close to capturing the incredible survival story of the coyote. As soon as Americans began ranching and herding in the West, they began working to destroy the coyote. Despite campaigns of annihilation employing poisons, gases, helicopters, and engineered epidemics, coyotes didn't just survive, they thrived, expanding across the continent from Anchorage, Alaska, to Central Park. In the war between humans and coyotes, coyotes have won hands-down.

On this episode of Locus Focus we talk with Dan Flores, author of Coyote America, about the long and twisted natural history of the coyote in North America and why the coyote, unlike the grey wolf, has beat back a century of eradication efforts.

Dan Flores is the A. B. Hammond Professor Emeritus of Western History at the University of Montana and the author of ten books on aspects of western US history. Flores lives just outside Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Dan will be reading from Coyote America on Thursday, July 21 at 7:30 pm at Powell's City of Books, 1005 W. Burnside, Portland, OR

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