This documentary's actual title is "Coyote Mystery: Attack in Wild".
The only other wild animals shown in this documentary are an American black bear and an eastern moose. They are shown as examples of wildlife within Cape Breton Highlands National Park. The main reason is there are warning signs about encountering either an American black bear or an eastern moose as well as any eastern coyote whenever wildlife viewers are hiking in the park. Non-threatening animals that are found within the park include bald eagles, American red squirrels, snowshoe hares, American martens, and Canada lynxes.
Taylor Mitchell's fate turned out to be North America's second fatal coyote assault. The first fatal coyote assault in North America occurred to a three-year-old girl named Kelly Keen on August 26, 1981 in Glendale, California. She was in the driveway of her house when a coyote attacked her. Both of her parents took her to Glendale Adventist Medical Center, but Kelly did not recover from the assault due to her broken neck and blood loss.
Five months after Taylor's tragic death, a young female American schoolteacher named Candice Berner lost her life in a wolf assault while she was jogging in Chignik Lake, Alaska. Like Taylor, Candice was by herself when two wolves attacked her. Four Chignik Lake residents who were returning home on snowmobiles saw blood on the road and a man who walked off the road spotted Candice's body which was partially devoured by the two wolves that fatally mauled her.