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.
yes. wolves with white coats blend in with the snow.
Dye. Dye is only used for sheep, cuz im not sure you can change the coat color of a wolf. its always white. try using the dye though. or look around for wolves in the wild.
Because we have only found the bones of dire wolves, it is impossible to know what color they were. It would be reasonable to guess that they were gray or black, like modern wolves and coyotes, although it is possible that they were a variety of other colors.
People wanted their fur for like coats and stuff
Because they want there fur coats for clothes.
The base color goes on 1st and how many coats depends on how dark you want the color. The more coats the darker the color. The "candy" is transparent.
Mostly grey, sometimes a rusty color red.
There are gray wolves, red wolves, and white wolves(To my knowledge). There might be more colors though.
Well, how about you ask yourself this question first? Why is your hair color the color it is? The answer is simple. Genetics. It's quite possible that the reason you're hair is, for example, black is because your mom or dad have black hair or carry the trait for black hair in their DNA. It's possible that the black, I can imagine, timber wolf is black is because one or both of its parents had or carried a dominant trait for black fur. Another reason black wolves are black is because all wolves belong to the same family of canines, despite the species. Arctic wolves are born black, they later on loose their black fur as they mature into white wolves better camouflaged in the white arctic snow. It's possible that a pack of arctic wolves migrated into the woodlands and later on evolved into timber wolves, but the pups began keeping their black or grayish coats seeing as how in their new forest environment this color of fur would help them hunt and hide better. My final reason is that, there are rare cases where the opposite of albinism occurs and instead of an animal having loss of pigment and ending up with white fur, they have way too much color pigment and end up with dark black fur. I hope that this helped you with your question. ^_^ and I hope you keep loving wolves just as much as I do.
The coats are randomly selected from all possible coats for that breed.
Their thick coats help them stay warm!
no