Coyotes are found in a wide variety of biomes. They are native to North America. They thrive in all sorts of biomes, especially where wolves and other top predators are not present. The genocidal campaign against wolves has allowed the coyote to thrive in many areas where the wolf once reigned supreme, and where the coyote was only known to inhabit about one-fourth of the North American continent prior to 1850, mostly across the Plains and into Mexico (where we got the name of the coyote from the Aztecs) it now thrives in nearly all of North America from Alaska into Central America.
deciduous fores
The biome is known as the tundra.
desert
Coyotes live in all North American deserts as well as in almost every biome on the continent. They have also adapted to living in urban areas.
Coyotes are found in a wide variety or habitats - from the tundra of Alaska and Canada through the taiga, deciduous forests, grasslands, deserts, mountains and even in the rainforests of Central America.
Predators include cougars, bobcats, coyotes, foxes, badgers, snakes, hawks, eagles, owls and many others.
Coyotes are found in all the deserts of North America as well as in nearly every other biome. They are even found in urban environments.
Coyotes have adapted to many biomes and are even found in cities. Recently, a coyote was captured in New York City. They are most common in grasslands and deserts, however.
coyotes eat badgers
Example possessive phrases for the plural noun 'coyotes' are:the coyotes' packthe coyotes' pupsthe coyotes' preythe coyotes' habitat
Some common animals found in shrubland biomes include coyotes, rabbits, deer, snakes, lizards, and various bird species such as sparrows and quail. These animals have adapted to the conditions of shrubland by developing ways to survive in the sparse vegetation and fluctuating temperatures.
More coyotes.