Brown is a color common to many subspecies of grey wolf and to the red wolf, but not a species nor subspecies of its own. Grey wolves, red wolves and coyotes likely had a common ancestor in the Hare-eating wolf, or Canis lepophagus.
Yes, there is at least one: the Ethiopian Wolf. It's endangered, only about 500 survive. a beautiful creature. Looks a lot like a fox. Look it up on Wikipedia.
It also looks a lot like the Carolina Dog / Dixie Dingo, a very fine primitive dog that came over from Asia, following the first Americans 9,000 years ago. It lives wild in southern pine and cypress swamps, and makes a great pet, guard dog, retriever, herder, and hunter. My neighbor has one. It's a wonderful dog.
Yes.Wolves can be white,black,grey or brown.
Im sorry to crush your dream but they dont exist.
Wolves
The wolves currently there are decendents of gray wolves brought to the park from Canada in 1995.
yes, and brown wolves too. not just gray.
yes, and brown wolves too. not just gray.
No, they can also be brown or white.
Brown is an English surname, which originated as a nickname for a person who had brown hair or skin.
gray wolves and brown bears
Yes, it is grayish-brown.
Maybe yes
Some wolves are gray, particularly the gray wolves of North America. However, even among the species gray wolves, you will find some individuals that are black, brown, tan or a mixture of colors. Other species of wolves can be a variety of colors ranging from pure black to red to brown to pure white.
HI, USA biggest producer
depends on the species. gray wolves can be gray, white, black, or a muxture of grays, blacks, reds, and whites. Arctic can be white. Red wolves are reddish brown.