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Mammals of Tommy Thompson ParkColonization of Tommy Thompson Park by mammals has been relatively slow compared to other wildlife such as birds. While birds can bypass the downtown core by flying over it, most mammals at TTP have had to travel there on foot negotiating treacherous highways and areas of intense human settlement - but they have managed to get here! Likely they use natural river and ravine corridors, like the Don River valley, as well as man-made passages like railway and hydro corridors, to arrive at TTP. Unlike birds or insects, most mammals are not easily seen and avoid human contact, so mammal sign is often the best way to determine their presence. Look for tracks, droppings and foraging evidence, like the browse of an eastern cottontail or tufts of fur from a predator-prey encounter. Remember to NEVER approach or feed a wild animal - the best thing you can do for it is give it space and leave it alone! The following is a list of some mammals or mammal sign that you may encounter at TTP. Eastern Coyote (Canis latrans)Coyotes have proven to be very adaptable in an urban environment, as witnessed by the gradual appearance of this species throughout much of Metropolitan Toronto. They were first documented at TTP in 1993, when they were observed in the Baselands area and around the lighthouse. Coyotes prefer open or sparsely treed areas. They dine on an abundance of food items that likely include eggs from ground nesting birds, small mammals like rodents and eastern cottontails, insects and berries. You may hear the vocalizations of coyotes if you visit the park at night and look for tracks in soft mud or snow and for scat that marks their territory.
Urban Coyote StudyCoyotes inhabit many parks, ravines, valleys and use these greenspace areas, roads, railways, and hydro rights-of-way as travel corridors from primary habitat areas like TTP. TRCA have established a partnership with the Ministry of Natural Resources to improve our understanding of these urban canids through a coyote telemetry research project at TTP. This telemetry work facilitates the understanding of urban coyote population densities, organization among family groups or packs, behavior (including fearlessness towards people and attacks on pets as prey), territorial fidelity, food habits, dispersion of sub-adults and diseases. The research gives us valuable insight into the function and features of connective corridors between TTP and the surrounding urban areas. Delineating these connective corridors provides valuable insight into the habitat requirements of these animals. If you see a coyote at TTP with a collar, it is one of the study coyotes whose movements we having been tracking several years. Please report your coyote sighting to the park naturalist and remember - never approach a wild animal. Small Aquatic Mammals• Beaver (Castor canadensis) While the beaver is considered mainly aquatic the mink and muskrat are semi-aquatic. Beaver have been present at TTP for over 20 years and evidence of their activity is obvious near almost every aquatic area. In some areas trees have been wrapped with wire to prevent the beaver from cutting too many.
Small Terrestrial Mammals• Raccoon (Procyon lotor) TTP has an ample population of raccoons and they have been observed in almost every corner of the park, especially around the Embayments and the Cell One Wetland. It is easy to find raccoon tracks in soft mud, but since they are nocturnal, they are not often seen. To spot a raccoon in the daytime look for them sleeping in trees - one was even seen sleeping in a Black-crowned Night-Heron nest on Peninsula C.
Small Rodents
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