In the contiguous 48 United States, southern Canada, and in Europe, wolves (Canis lupus) have greatly increased and expanded their range during the past few decades.They are prolific, disperse long distances, readily recolonize new areas where humans allow them, and are difficult to control when populations become established.Because wolves originally lived nearly everywhere throughout North America and Eurasia, and food in the form of wild and domestic prey is abundant there, many conservation-minded people favor wolves inhabiting even more areas.On the other hand, wolves conflict in several ways with rural residents who prefer fewer wolves. This article discusses the recovery of wolves, their benefits and values, the ways in which they co...
Wolves (Canis lupus) have expanded their distribution into areas of the midwest United States that h...
The Minnesota wolf (Canis lupus) population was estimated by the Minnesota Department of Natural Res...
Wolves have been one of the most scientifically examined of all wildlife species (Mech, 1995b). Many...
WOLVES CAN LIVE almost anywhere in the Northern Hemisphere, and almost everywhere they do, they are ...
Wolf populations are undoubtedly increasing in the western United States as a result of wolf reintro...
Gray wolf (Canis lupus) populations were deliberately eliminated from nearly all of their historic r...
Wolves (Canis lupus) were once common throughout North America but were deliberately exterminated in...
Wolf populations have continued to increase after the Endangered Species Act of 1973 within the Unit...
Most gray wolves in the United States live in disjunct populations. Management of isolated populati...
Before the arrival of European settlers, wolves ranged widely across the continent, from coast to co...
THE WOLF IS TRULY a special animal. As the most widely distributed of all land mammals, the wolf, fo...
Wolf mortality in a high-road-density area of Minnesota exceeds that in an adjacent wilderness, and ...
The seeds for the blossoming of the wolf (Canis lupus) population throughout the upper Midwest were ...
The gray wolf Canis lupus occupies only about 1 percent of its former range in the lower 48 states (...
1) Why was the gray wolf listed as endangered? 2) What types of habitat do wolves use? 3) Do wolve...
Wolves (Canis lupus) have expanded their distribution into areas of the midwest United States that h...
The Minnesota wolf (Canis lupus) population was estimated by the Minnesota Department of Natural Res...
Wolves have been one of the most scientifically examined of all wildlife species (Mech, 1995b). Many...
WOLVES CAN LIVE almost anywhere in the Northern Hemisphere, and almost everywhere they do, they are ...
Wolf populations are undoubtedly increasing in the western United States as a result of wolf reintro...
Gray wolf (Canis lupus) populations were deliberately eliminated from nearly all of their historic r...
Wolves (Canis lupus) were once common throughout North America but were deliberately exterminated in...
Wolf populations have continued to increase after the Endangered Species Act of 1973 within the Unit...
Most gray wolves in the United States live in disjunct populations. Management of isolated populati...
Before the arrival of European settlers, wolves ranged widely across the continent, from coast to co...
THE WOLF IS TRULY a special animal. As the most widely distributed of all land mammals, the wolf, fo...
Wolf mortality in a high-road-density area of Minnesota exceeds that in an adjacent wilderness, and ...
The seeds for the blossoming of the wolf (Canis lupus) population throughout the upper Midwest were ...
The gray wolf Canis lupus occupies only about 1 percent of its former range in the lower 48 states (...
1) Why was the gray wolf listed as endangered? 2) What types of habitat do wolves use? 3) Do wolve...
Wolves (Canis lupus) have expanded their distribution into areas of the midwest United States that h...
The Minnesota wolf (Canis lupus) population was estimated by the Minnesota Department of Natural Res...
Wolves have been one of the most scientifically examined of all wildlife species (Mech, 1995b). Many...