Strength In Numbers How Wolves Use Teamwork And Strategy To Bring Down Large Prey: In the wild, survival often depends on intelligence, cooperation and timing. Few predators demonstrate these ...
By preying on beavers at key times of year, wolves do more than feed themselves, they help influence where wetlands form ...
New research from the University of Minnesota upends long-held understanding about how wolves, bears and cougars—three of Yellowstone National Park's most iconic carnivores—compete for prey. For years ...
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 ...
A bison calf narrowly avoided a pack of ravenous wolves, and the whole brouhaha was captured in a video recently published in ...
Q. Most folks know that lions and wolves hunt in groups to catch what they’re going to eat. I was wondering if any other animals hunt in packs or team up to catch their food, not counting the ...
Research from Nepal’s Lapchi Valley reveals how three apex predators share the same rugged landscape by reducing competition through distinct feeding habits.
Stark black against an open sky, common ravens are often spotted soaring above wolves in Yellowstone National Park. Researchers assumed that the notorious scavengers were following the wolves to get ...