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Researchers hope study on coyote grief will grow compassion for misunderstood species

Coyotes mate for life-and grieve when their partner dies

Scientists hope understanding coyote widowhood will someday help humans in their own grief.

New research around coyote bonds and behaviours shows that coyotes experience grief over the loss of a partner.

A 2012 study previously found that coyotes select one mate for life, offering more evidence of complex social relationships between these animals.

A new study from Rachel Tong and Sara Freeman finds even more evidence of complex emotions tied to these social bonds: coyotes who experience the loss of a partner show the same stress signals in their brains that we see in human grief.

Though it may seem clear to many through common sense and observation that animals experience strong bonds, scientific research like this helps to grow public awareness of animal sentience, which can in turn support stronger protections for animals.

According to the National Geographic article on the study, “Freeman hopes her work can help build compassion for coyotes, which are often regarded as pests and targeted in wildlife killing contests and by frustrated landowners.”