Hm... I'm still curios on wolves... Seriously...
I mean like...
How they hunt...
How they raise their pups
How they kill grizzly bears... I'm curios about that mostly...
I guess I should Research more bout wolves then ^.^
Curiosity
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Curiosity
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Re: Curiosity
Since this topic is more about wolf-related questions, I'll move it accordingly. ^^
-Moved to Wolf Q&A-
-Moved to Wolf Q&A-
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Re: Curiosity
To answer your first question, I would view this link.
How do Wolves Hunt? http://jkenny.hubpages.com/hub/Wolves-Hunting-Behaviour
The above also includes a video, Which you can watch to help out. Wolves mainly hunt in packs, which helps a lot when hunting as a lone adult wolf itself cannot take down prey by themselves, it is fairly rare.
Question two
How Gray Wolves Take Care of Their Pups http://www.ehow.com/info_10017929_gray- ... ldren.html
As for your last question, Wolves don't normally go for the full grown bears, if they do attack any bear, they normally go for cubs since they are weaker then a full grown bear.
Here's just a little scene that happened that might interest you on Grizzly vs Wolf interactions
How do Wolves Hunt? http://jkenny.hubpages.com/hub/Wolves-Hunting-Behaviour
The above also includes a video, Which you can watch to help out. Wolves mainly hunt in packs, which helps a lot when hunting as a lone adult wolf itself cannot take down prey by themselves, it is fairly rare.
Question two
How Gray Wolves Take Care of Their Pups http://www.ehow.com/info_10017929_gray- ... ldren.html
As for your last question, Wolves don't normally go for the full grown bears, if they do attack any bear, they normally go for cubs since they are weaker then a full grown bear.
Here's just a little scene that happened that might interest you on Grizzly vs Wolf interactions
Source: http://www.yellowstonepark.com/2011/06/ ... onal-park/While we watched, two wolves approached the bear from one side, while a third wolf circled to the back. The bear spun to face what seemed to be the greater threat. That left his hindquarters exposed to a slashing, hit-and-run attack on his butt. The bear spun about and charged, but not very far, returning to lie down on the elk and begin eating it.
The wolves never left the bear alone, but the bear was eating and the wolves were not.
A second, smaller grizzly bear started to approach the party, thought better of it, and ambled away.
The next morning, we returned to find the bear still under the tree, atop a partially-eaten elk, and a couple of wolves keeping an eye on things.
That’s generally how it goes in our all-natural kindergarten class – the big guy gets the food despite the harassment of the little guys.
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