The grey wolf is a pack animal. The pack is composed mainly of family members.
First off herds and groups are the same thing. Gray wolves live in groups/herds in numbers 2-20.
Because we hunt them for their pelt and to "protect" livestock and herds of moose, caribou, and deer that are far more plentiful than the gray wolf already. The world needs wolves.
Wolves thin out the elderly, the slow, and the diseased animals from their respective herds. Montana Elk herd numbers are UP 18% since the re-introduction of Wolves.
Heavens, no! Grey wolves are flourishing in Alaska, Canada, and the western States like Idaho and Washington. In fact, in Idaho hunters were recently allowed to hunt and kill grey wolves because the wolves were rapidly depleting the Elk herds. The greys also kill far too many sheep and cattle, costing farmers much money.
most wolves are harmful and that does include gray wolves
horses and wolves and coyotes
gray wolves are mammals who give birth
how baby gray wolves protected
Gray wolves interact the same way all wolves do, through howling. They mark there territory and live in packs. The pack leader is the alpha. Other wolves show submittance by rolling on their back and bitting.
Gray wolves, the species of wolves we have in the U.S., are a shade of gray, white, or black.
No, maned wolves do not hibernate or migrate.
Gray wolves live in the upper region of Michigan.