Throughout northern Wisconsin and locally in central wisconsin. This site http://www.dnr.state.wi.us/org/land/er/mammals/wolf/wolf_map.htm has a map of pack locations
"Presently the Gray Wolf inhabits Michigan's Upper Peninsula, northern Minnesota and Wisconsin and a large geographic range in Alaska, Canada, Europe, Middle East and Asia. The gray wolf once lived in diverse regions as Israel and Egypt." thewildones.org
there are two species of wolves. the red wolf and the gray wolf. the mexican gray wolf is a type of gray wolf. so they are actually the same but the mexican gray wolf just specifies the region its in whereas the gray wolf is more of an umbrella term. :)
they make babies
No, the Arabian wolf is a subspecies of the gray wolf.
Yes. The Arctic wolf is a subspecies of the grey wolf.
the gray wolf
Neither. The gray wolf is listed as a species of least concern.
Because it's grey!
There are only three species of wolves: gray wolf, Ethiopian wolf, and red wolf. Timber wolves are only a subspecies of gray wolves.
a baby gray wolf is called a pup
i think that they would find a shelter
The gray wolf is a nonspecific subspecies of the wolf, Canis lupus, which has 39 named subspecies including the domestic dog Canis lupus familiaris.The Eurasian gray wolf is Canis lupus lupus.The gray wolf is Canis Lupus. The red wolf is Canis Rufus.