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There are two species of wolves in North America:
The smaller red wolf (Canis rufus) was once found throughout the southeastern United States. By the late 1960's, their numbers had dwindled to small populations in Texas and Louisiana and they could not find enough mates of their own species, they started interbreeding with coyotes. The US Fish and Wildlife Service captured a number of animals and selected ones they believed to be pure red wolves. They started a captive breeding program to increase their numbers, and then reintroduced red wolves in the Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge on the North Carolina coast, and in Great Smokey Mountains National Park in southern Tennessee.
The larger gray wolf (Canis lupus) can actually range in color from almost pure black to almost completely white, and often is golden brown, but the individual guard hairs are banded light-dark-light-dark. This is called agouti banding, and is found in a number of wild species.
There are a number of different races or subspecies of gray wolf living in various terrain, from the frozen tundra of the Arctic wolves to the dense forests where wolves live in Minnesota, and even in the mountainous Southwest, where the Mexican wolf (Canis lupus baileyi) once lived.
Of all the subspecies of gray wolves, the Mexican wolf is the most endangered. Unlike many animals whose decline was due mostly to habitat loss from human settlement, the Mexican wolf was the target of a deliberate trapping and poisoning campaign carried out in the early part of the 20th century by the federal government, which considered them pests. This has been the fate of many subspecies of gray wolves and has resulted in their status as endangered in many areas.
Fortunately, today many people understand how beneficial wolves are, weeding out weak and diseased prey animals, which helps to balance the ecosystem.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has a captive breeding program for the Mexican wolf, and several facilities in Mexico are helping also. Sadly, even after years of captive breeding, there are only a few over 60 Mexican wolves in the entire United States, all in captivity. There is a plan to reintroduce them in New Mexico, currently undergoing review for an Environmental Impact Statement.
Other wolves in the United States are doing better. There are between 4,000 and 7,000 wolves in Alaska. Unfortunately, there has been a recent wolf reduction program in progress there, involving the killing of 50 to 75 percent of the wolf population in a localized area. Although the wolf population as a whole in Alaska will not be affected by the program, many biologists and others strongly oppose what they feel is a politically motivated, completely unjustified program.
There are about 1500 to 1900 wolves in Minnesota, mostly in the northeast. About 30 to 50 live in Wisconsin, a dozen or so on the upper peninsula of Michigan along with an additional 12 on Isle Royale (also in Michigan), and about 100 in Montana. Isolated reports of a few individuals have been made in Idaho, Washington, North Dakota, and a few other states. Currently, there is a reintroduction program in progress to reinstate wolves into the Yellowstone National Park area, where they are the only animals lacking in what will soon be a complete ecosystem.
Wolves have a double layer of fur. A wooly underfur grows very thick in the fall and winter and keeps the wolf warm, while an outer layer of guard hairs repels snow and water, and keeps the underfur dry so it can trap air as an insulator. When a storm arrives, a wolf will often lie down behind a fallen tree or brush pile (using it as a wind break), curl up and tuck its nose under its bushy tail. In this way, it can easily survive temperatures will below zero. During the spring, the thick underfur sheds so the wolf can survive the heat.
Within the pack, wolves will constantly demonstrate their rank. When two wolves in the pak meet, the higher-ranking one will show aggression and confidence by raising its tail, putting its ears forward, lifting its lips in a snarl, and making itself look as big and threatening as possible. The hackles, the fur along the top of its back, will go up automatically when a wolf is threatening a lower-ranking one. The subordinate, or lower-ranking wolf, tries to make itself look small and non-threatening. Its tail will be tucked under its belly, ears laid back flat, and it will roll over and submit to the higher-ranking wolf, licking its muzzle and "letting it know that it's boss." In almost all cases, this ritual substitutes for actual fighting. If wolves often fought and hurt each other, they might be too injured to be able to hunt and survive.
Even working together, it is difficult for wolves to catch their prey. Healthy deer can easily outrun wolves, while large animals like moose or bison often stand their ground until the wolves give up. Typically, wolves do not waste a lot of time going after obviously healthy prey. Instead, they are skilled at noticing weaknesses, testing animals by getting them to run and seeing which ones appear old or sick. Some studies by biologists have shown that when wolves hunt deer, an average of 84 to 87 deer out of 100 escape. The ones that are caught are usually either old, sick, or very young, not fit ones in the prime of life.
After catching and killing their food, wolves sometimes eat up to 20 percent of their body weight in meat. For a typical 100 pound adult male wolf, that is like eating 80 quarter-pound hamburgers in one sitting! Other times food is scarce and wolves can go several weeks without eating at all. On average, adult wolves need about 5 pounds of meat per day in the winter, and about half that in the summer. Pups and juveniles need much more food for their body weight than adults.
When pups are young, the adults eat a lot at the kill site, then bring the food back inside their stomachs to the pups. When the pups greet the adults by licking and biting at the corners of their mouths, the big wolves regurgitate (or throw up) some of the partly digested food, which the pups eagerly gobble up.
The pups' eyes open after about 10 days. Around three weeks after birth, the pups begin to explore outside the den. Sometimes the mother carries the pups to another den to guard them from harm. When the pups are a little older, they are left at rendezvous sites, usually with an adult "baby-sitter," while the rest of the pack hunts for food. By fall, the pups are about 80 percent of their adult size, and are able to travel with the pack as they hunt throughout the winter.
Some people try to keep wolves, or wolf-dog mixes known as "wolf hybrids," as pets. Many think that if they raise a wolf pup with love and treat it like a dog, it will grow up to be a loyal pet and fierce watchdog.
The problem is that they see the many similarities between wolves and dogs, and ignore the vital differences. Although dogs originally developed from wolves, it occurred by selective breeding for thousands of generations that actually altered the genetic makeup of the animal. This changed the animal's innate or "built-in" behavior to make it suitable for living with people in a home. The behavior of wolves, and of many wolf hybrids, which enables them to survive in the wild, makes them unsuitable as a pet.
Dishonest people often sell northern-breed dog mixes as "wolf-hybrids" when they actually have little or no wolf in them. Because these dogs may be wonderful pets, many people refuse to believe that wolf hybrids need special handling. Sometimes these misguided people later get a real hybrid and cannot safely handle it.
Often, when people do try to treat them as if they were dogs, the animals end up in a situation where their normal behavior results in an attack, sometimes fatally injuring someone. The animals are almost invariably killed, and the image of an entire endangered species suffers.
There are a number of other facilities that have captive wolves, and many zoos have wolf exhibits. If you have a chance to visit such places, spend some time watching the wolves and try to figure out their rank order by noticing which wolves submit to others, and which submit to no other wolves. Try to visit either as soon as the facility opens or in the late afternoon/early evening, since wolves are crepuscular, meaning that they are most active around dawn and dusk, and often rest during most of the middle of the day and night.
Unfortunately, people still believe old stories and fables about wolves. Tales like "Little Red Riding Hood" and contemporary werewolf horror films paint the wolf in a negative manner and only increase fear and hatred for those who cannot separate the fictional image from the real animal.
An excellent list of all kinds of wolf books, videos, and organizations is in the booklet, "Beyond Little Red Riding Hood - A Resource Directory for Teaching about Wolves," developed by the
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For permission to use or for more information about wolf photographs please write Monty Sloan |
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