Wolves are hunted mainly for their fur, for sport, or to protect livestock.
Because they were hunted.
because natives over hunted them
Yes. The Tasmanian wolf, sometimes called a Tasmanian tiger but more properly known as the Thylacine, was literally hunted to extinction after a bounty was placed on it as a livestock killer.
a group of German uboats that hunted Allied and US ships
Wolves are hunted the same way most animals are hunted. They are generally hunted with either bows or guns, although they are a little more difficult to get to than their slower vegetarian counterparts.
Because of being hunted almost to extinction due to superstitions and demand for fur.
Dire wolves were predators much like the Timber Wolf is today. They would've hunted down bison, deer, wild horse, etc.
The gray wolf, as a species, is not endangered. It is classified as a species of least concern. Only a few subspecies are threatened or endangered.
Some Algonquins didn't hunt some did. If they did it would be: moose , caribou , seal, fish (salmon), wolf and small mammals such as rabbits.
No animal could or would hunt down a wolf, except a human who is hunting a wolf for its hide. In the natural world (humans not included), wolves are apex predators, not prey, so they are the hunters, hardly (or never, rather) the hunted.
Gloucester County, Great Britain there are no wolves. The wolves in Great Britain were hunted to the point of extinction.
They did until they were hunted to extinction but have bee reintroduced with great controversy to the National Park System and are doing well.