“Urban Coyotes Never Stray, New Study Finds”
Scientists who genetically sampled 236 coyotes in the Chicago area over a six-year period found no evidence of polygamy – of the animals having more than one mate – nor of one mate ever leaving another while the other was still alive.
Kurt Knebusch, The Ohio State University Research and Innovation Communications
Nursing their own divorces,
scarred hearts, straying eyes,
the researchers veered
from language of romance,
never mentioned devotion,
spoke instead of mating systems,
his clear genetic stake
in his offspring, her need
for provisioning, territory defense.
They swagger midnight alleys
exchange wary looks
with shivery backyard dogs,
dodge eight lanes of traffic
together. What but fierce
certainty could temper
such dangerous lives?
Once in a while
our streets are theirs:
After the blizzard, Chicagoans
awaken to their stilled city,
gaze from stoops and fire escapes,
discover parallel paths
crossing crisp white drifts
where before dawn the lovers
in sodium spotlights danced
pas de deux, adagio
past the snow-stayed cars.