there are usally about 7-11 wolves in a pack
About 5 - 10 depending of food resources it may be larger
8 to 35 members are in a pack .the more wolves the more food!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..
The average Wolf pack can range from 2 to 8 wolves. The largest Wolf pack ever recorded consisted of 36 wolves.
wolf packs can have as many wolves as the alpha can put up with, but the pack size rarely exceeds 15 wolves.
4-7 have to be in a pack to hunt or travel
mostly four or five with six cubs you can tell because as many as four wolves have been seen attacking the same prey and they work as a team to bring it down and another fact is that there is usually three females and one male because the males don't like each other in fact they are very territorial and guard their own turf and a lot of wolfs are solitary because they can't find a den or a safe place to keep their family and the males go off on their own and the females look after their cubs protecting them herself
The average wolf pack consists of a family of 5–11 animals (1–2 adults, 3–6 juveniles and 1–3 yearlings), or sometimes two or three such families, with exceptionally large packs consisting of 42 wolves being known.
there can be 30-50 wolves in a pack . but there can be 20-30 it depends on the kind of wolf .
there can be 8-15 wolves in a pack depending on the kind of wolf.
Well, 10-20 Wolves is the original pack size, a big pack would have 20-30
A wolf pack can have up to thirty wolves in it and down to three.
I would say 15+
Normally it's 5-11 wolves.
5
No, but there is at times a fight for leadership of the pack.
Wolves IS a plural noun; it refers to 2 or more animals. Maybe you want a collective noun, which is different from a plural noun. Wolves live in packs, and pack would be a collective noun for wolves. A pack is a group of wolves, but pack itself is used as a singular noun. A pack is a single pack, even though it is made up of several wolves.
If you are talking about order within the pack, i think they are the wolves that break up the fights (peace keeper) or the wolves that look after the cubs (nannys)
When wolves are pups there parents take them to anther den to raise them. As they grow up over the years the parents teach them to hunt a stalk and all those skills. Then when there older they hunt with the family until its time for them to part from the pack and make a pack OF THERE OWN! HOPE THIS HELPS! <- :)
Mowgli in Rudyard Kiplings The Jungle Book.
Not at all! Wolves trot around their territory in a pack, and scare up animals to eat in that way.
they mate (you know...) then the female wolf gets pregnant and has pups. usually only the alpha's of a pack would mate and them and their pups will make a pack. wolves are born in litters 6-8 are born together (i THINK) but some might die out before growing up for some reason.
A wolf pack can consist of four to forty wolves. Wolves have a strict social order. Wolves in the wild have a five to ten year life span, but wolves in captivity can live for up to twenty years. The alpha female and male wolves usually mate for life.
"Alpha" and "Omega" are titles of social roles usually given to wolves, although they are occasionally extended to dogs, in a pack. "Alpha" wolves/dogs were once thought to be the leaders of a pack, but are now known to be the parents (a pack is usually made up of family members). "Omega" wolves/dogs are the "general citizenry". You can think of alphas as the family patriarch or president of the wolf/dog pack, and omegas as the children-and-siblings or citizens of the wolf/dog pack. Of course, if you are referring to the 2010 movie "Alpha and Omega" then your answer is: No. The main characters of "Alpha and Omega" are wolves.
To feed more wolves in the pack. Each wolf can eat up to 20 pounds in a setting. That's more than a lion can muster!
Wolves hunt in packs and will usually take down either the old, young or sick. When their prey senses them they will run but the old, young and sick won't be able to keep up with the herd so they are prey for the wolves. In a pack the wolves will latch onto the throat, back and haunches to take down their prey
pupYoung wolves are called pups or cubs. The entire pack takes care of the young, which are often born in litter of up to six at a time.