Probably not. A single deer has no chance of killing a bear, since the bear is way too strong and big for the deer to kill. The deer could possibly kill a cougar or a wolf though. In fact, deer are almost 80 percent bears' menus.
It's possible as long as the wolf has had experience in hunting and is not injured.It also depends on its ranking rather its alpha or omega an
omega might be a no if its alpha it should be yes.
No. Ninety-nine percent of the time a lone wolf is enough to bring down a deer.
yes if they wanted to but they wouldn't. and they wouldn't create anything
A bull elk or a cow elk can kill a single wolf, but not a pack of wolves.
They don't eat meat, so the answer is no.
Tundra wolf is one
One large buck deer on the rut with good defense and good strength is good to kill a wolf.
it depends how hungry it is.
A lone wolf would not be able to pull down a fully grown moose, but they would eat one if it was a baby or if it was already dead.
For one. deer. Then the population of deer will go up and the level of grass will go down so everything eating or fueled by grass will die. That's a lot of animals!
Deer are hunted by man. Wolves will also take them if the opportunity arises. The cougar is always on the lookout for deer, and will actively hunt them. And a bear will take one if it can, though it doesn't hunt them, per se. If a wolverine, bobcat or coyote happens on a young fawn and can take it, it will.
there are many i have a food web where the deer eats the berries and then a wolf eats the deer and then the mountain lion eats the wolf...there are a few more you can make but that's one i have...
One of the effects of overpopulations in animals is for example if deer and wolves are two species being watched and the deer population rises the wolf population will rise.
We're gonna have fun with this thing... or if you r talking about wen he wins he says I will be the one to take you down
Teen Wolf is on TV for one hour, with commercials.
Herbivores (like deer) eat the plants that it gets spread on. We'll say the plants have 1 piece of DDT. Since each deer eats LOTS of individual plants (we'll say leaves), the DDT in the deer will be more than the leaves had. We'll say this deer ate 100 leaves in one day, now it has 100 pieces of DDT in it. Then a wolf comes along and kills the deer and eats all the deer. Now the wolf has 100 pieces of DDT in it. The wolf kills ANOTHER deer the next day and eats it, and now this wolf has 200 pieces of DDT in it. So on and so on. So the MORE DDT you have in an organism's system, the more toxic it is. We call this bioamplification. Each food level it increases GREATLY in the fatty tissues.
Not at all. Black wolves only kill certain animals that live in their territory. One black wolf cannot take down an adult moose or a cougar, but a pack of black wolves might.