The vegetation does not change. Wolves are meat eaters so they don't eat the vegetation so their impact is close to zero.
when there were no wolves in yellowstone park yellowstone park had to much elks so when the wolves arrived again the wolves killed all the elks
Both the RED WOLF and FLORIDA WOLF are extinct, but eastern North Carolina is home to a re-introduced population of RED WOLF/COYOTE HYBRID.The Red Wolf was re-introduced to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in the 1990s, but the program was cancelled in 1998 due in part to wolves roaming past the boundaries of the park.
The wolves currently there are decendents of gray wolves brought to the park from Canada in 1995.
Yosemite National Park does not have wolves. The park does have wolverines, but they are seldom seen.
No. It was taken off a few years ago because new laws were passed to protect wolves from being hunted in the United States, and many wolves were introduced back into territories that were once empty of wolves, such as Yellowstone National Park.
Yellowstone park had no wolves for a long time and the large elk population kept all young alder and aspin trees grazed to extinction. There were no young (alder & aspin) trees in the park. Wolves were introduced in the 70's and now there are large groves of young trees - this is due to a dramatic decrease in the elk population - due to predations by wolves.
When wolves were wiped out in Yellowstone Park, the elk number rocketed and threaten the environment. Wolves have since been reintroduced and the elk number have returned to a sustainable level.
Bears yes, wolves no.
No. The present range of wolves in the wild does not (yet) extend into Utah.
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Wolves can mostly be found in a Forest, or in a reservation area, ex: Yellow Stone Park.
1995....