Wolves are very social, so yes, they do.
There are only three species of wolves: gray wolf, Ethiopian wolf, and red wolf. Timber wolves are only a subspecies of gray wolves.
A gray wolf is the largest member of the dog family. Gray Wolves are carnivours and prefere animals larger then themselvs. They are very social with other wolves and live in packs of 2-20 wolves
cougars,humans,and other wolves
cougars,humans,and other wolves
No, there are several other subspecies of the gray wolf that live in the Arctic, including the tundra wolf, Greenland wolf, Yukon wolf and others.
There is no specific collective noun for gray wolves. The collective nouns for wolves are a herd of wolves, a pack of wolves, or a rout of wolves.
Gray wolves are the species Canis lupus.
A Timber wolf and a Gray wolf are the same species, just with a different names. Timber wolves refer to a specific region, and Gray wolves is a more general term for all northern wolves. So it really depends which gray wolf you're looking at.
The timber wolf is a race of the gray wolf.
Grey Wolves are carnivores as they only eat meat.A gray wolf is a carnivore
Humans, and other grey wolves...? not sure :S. and its GREY
No, there are several other subspecies of the gray wolf that live in the Arctic, including the tundra wolf, Greenland wolf, Yukon wolf and others.