By Exec Edge Editorial Staff Behind every scientific breakthrough at Colossal Biosciences stands a question that transcends ...
A new line of research has revealed a surprising finding about how the presence of wolves helps keep people safe.
The Voyageurs Wolf Project (VWP) published a new paper in the October 2023 issue of Ecological Applications, which examined wolves’ hunting patterns of deer in the Northwoods region of Minnesota and ...
Management of gray wolves (Canis lupus) has a reputation for being one of the most contentious conservation issues in the ...
Live Science on MSN
Did reintroducing wolves to Yellowstone really cause an ecological cascade?
Previous research on the effect of wolves on the food web has been criticized, raising questions about the predator’s role in ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Ancient wolves likely reached this island by boat, not land
On a wind-battered rock in the Baltic Sea, archaeologists have uncovered a scene that should not exist: gray wolves living ...
WILDLIFE -- A study has been launched in northeastern Washington to determine how eight years of growth in the state's wolf population is affecting other wildlife species. The Washington Department of ...
COLORADO, USA — New research, published Monday, predicts where wolves could eventually thrive in Colorado. U.S. Forest Service Research Ecologist Dr. Mark Ditmer pinpointed wildernesses near Aspen: ...
ISLE ROYALE, Mich. — It’s long been assumed that wolves will prey upon the easiest meals out there, including the sick, the very young and the old among the deer or moose they live with. Now, a new ...
Ten years after the federal government reintroduced gray wolves to Yellowstone National Park, the UCLA Conservation Genetics Resource Center is conducting research that will aid in understanding the ...
The saying "safety in numbers" is typically a phrase associated with animals considered prey. The idea being: More eyes and ears in a group help alert wildlife to approaching predators. And the more ...
I felt humbled," a guide leading the Arctic tour told Newsweek, as "they walk by as if you are just an object out on the land ...
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