New research is improving scientists’ understanding of gray wolf behavior. A study recently published in the journal Current Biology shows that wolves can abandon their dens with their young in tow to ...
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Yellowstone-area wolves observed moving pups to follow elk — upending scientific assumptions
Scientific research has long assumed gray wolves are non-migratory during springtime, staying anchored to tend to litters of nearly helpless pups. For the first weeks of life, after all, pups are ...
Brian Dugovich’s colleagues came up with that catchy four-word sound bite — “farming elk feeds wolves” — to sum up one finding from a study he led that investigated the effectiveness of Wyoming’s ...
Most of us are familiar with the law of unintended consequences. You set out to do something and end up causing things to happen that you did not anticipate. Like suppressing wildfire, which leads to ...
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 ...
Get any of our free daily email newsletters — news headlines, opinion, e-edition, obituaries and more. Scientific research has long assumed gray wolves are non-migratory during springtime, staying ...
Scientific research has long assumed gray wolves are non-migratory during springtime, staying anchored to tend to litters of nearly helpless pups. For the first weeks of life, after all, pups are ...
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