Compared to their modern Holocene counterparts, Pleistocene coyotes were larger and more robust, weighing , likely in response to larger competitors and prey rather than
Bergmann's rule. Their skulls and jaws were significantly thicker and deeper than in modern coyotes, with a shorter and broader rostrum and wider
carnassial (denoting the large upper premolar and lower molar teeth of a carnivore, adapted for shearing flesh) teeth. These adaptions allowed it to cope with higher levels of stress, when it killed larger prey, compared to modern coyotes. Behaviorally, it is likely to have been more social than the modern coyote, as its remains are the third most common in the
La Brea Tar Pits, after
dire wolves and
sabre-toothed cats, both thought to be gregarious species. Their reduction in size occurred within 1,000 years of the occurrence of the
Quaternary extinction event, when the climate changed and the majority of their larger prey became extinct. Furthermore, Pleistocene coyotes were unable to successfully exploit the canid big game hunting
niche left vacant after the extinction of the dire wolf, as that gap was rapidly filled by gray wolves. These gray wolves are likely to have actively killed off the larger-bodied coyotes, with
natural selection favoring the modern gracile morph.
Human predation on the Pleistocene coyote's dwindling prey base may have also impacted the animal's change in morphology. ==
Canis latrans harriscrooki==