Grey wolves adapt their diets as a result of climate change, eating harder foods such as bones to extract nutrition during warmer climates, new research has found. The study, led by the University of ...
On Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, gray wolves are doing something unexpected: hunting sea otters. This surprising dietary shift appears to have notable implications for both ecosystems and wolf ...
WDFW biologists Ben Maletzke, left, and Trent Roussin do a health check on a wolf after collaring it prior to releasing it. (Photo courtesy of Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife) The gray wolf ...
Fossil evidence has shown how grey wolves adapt their diets to deal with global warming. The carnivorous predators eat harder foods - such as bones - to extract nutrition during warmer climates, ...
Newly published data shows just how big Wyoming wolves can get. The reasons are complicated, but include diet and coyote ...
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Choosing coexistence over conflict: How some California ranchers are adapting to wolves
But wolves were new. After the last gray wolves were shot down in the 1920s, generations of California’s ranchers raised their cattle without having to worry about — or prepare for — this predator in ...
The gray wolf population in Washington has experienced positive growth since breeding pairs returned to the state in 2008. That positive growth was unexpectedly stunted in 2024 when the population ...
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