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Pepperdine

Informed of But Not Alarmed By: Pepperdine's Coyote Awareness Advisory and the Campus That Studies Urbanization's Effect on Its Own Wildlife Hazards

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Confirmed Threat

On March 24, 2023, Pepperdine University issued a Malibu Campus Coyote Awareness advisory following several coyote sightings during the spring 2023 term, providing detailed guidance on what to do when coyotes are encountered. The advisory reflects a striking institutional irony: Pepperdine's own biology faculty had recently published peer-reviewed research confirming that urban coyotes on and around the Malibu campus have become significantly less cautious around humans than their rural counterparts.

Alerts
1
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
Pepperdine University
Private R2 · CA
~7,600 studentsPepperdine Emergency Notifications
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

1 message in sequence · 1 verified verbatim

INITIAL ALERTWebsite
Subject: Malibu Campus Coyote Awareness. Following several coyote sightings on the Malibu campus during the spring 2023 term, Pepperdine would like to educate the University community regarding what to do when coyotes are seen on campus to ensure all are informed of, but not alarmed by, the wildlife with whom we share the Santa Monica Mountains. If you see a coyote on or near the Malibu campus, please report the incident to Public Safety at 310.506.4441. Respect the animal. Do not feed wildlife. Do not approach the animal; leave space for the animal to escape. Maintain eye contact and move away slowly. Do not run. Running could trigger the animal's instinct to chase you. Appear as large, loud, and powerful as possible. Shine a bright light at the animal, especially at night. If there are small children or pets present, pick them up immediately.
Verbatim text of the March 24, 2023 advisory as published on Pepperdine's official Emergency Information site; its signature phrase 'informed of, but not alarmed by, the wildlife with whom we share the Santa Monica Mountains' is a standard formulation Pepperdine adopted after the February 2022 mountain lion dog kill and applies to subsequent wildlife notifications as a deliberate coexistence-over-alarm messaging strategy.
The instruction 'Appear as large, loud, and powerful as possible' reflects hazing technique protocol for coyotes, distinct from mountain lion protocol (where noise and size also help) and black bear protocol, demonstrating that Pepperdine maintains species-specific response guidance for its resident wildlife.
Pepperdine biology professor Javier Monzon and student researcher Lucian Himes ('23) published research around this same time confirming that urban coyotes near the Malibu campus were less fearful of humans than rural coyotes, making this advisory particularly resonant as the campus simultaneously studied and communicated about the same animal.
Context

Background

Pepperdine University's Malibu campus shares the Santa Monica Mountains with a well-established coyote population. Coyotes in the area are documented to be less fearful of humans than rural coyotes, as confirmed by research from Pepperdine's own biology department published circa 2022-2023. This creates a situation unique in campus wildlife management: the university's academic research directly informs the behavioral risks described in its own emergency advisories. The March 24, 2023 advisory followed a series of spring sightings and used the same non-alarmist framing Pepperdine had adopted after the February 2022 mountain lion dog kill. Unlike mountain lion advisories, this coyote advisory did not restrict any campus operations or order shelter; it was purely educational. The advisory is distinguished from a typical timely warning by its subject line format ('Subject: Malibu Campus Coyote Awareness') and its explicit educational tone, reflecting Pepperdine's classification of wildlife sightings as advisory-level events rather than Clery-reportable incidents. The Santa Monica Mountains support one of the most studied urban coyote populations in the United States, and the Pepperdine campus sits at the intersection of active ecological research and practical campus safety management.
Outcome
No injuries. Advisory issued for community awareness. No capture or removal. Report sightings to Public Safety at 310-506-4441.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
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  3. Official
Tags
wildlifecoyoteadvisorycaliforniapepperdinemalibusanta-monica-mountainsurban-wildlifeeducational-advisory
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion