Sadly they ARE extinct in the WILD.
No. All Mexican gray wolves are extinct on the wild. There are some 300 individuals on several facilities located in Mexico and the United States.
Humans hunting them.
Gray wolves are not extinct. Their conservation status is Least Concern.Not as a species. They are listed as 'Least Concern" by the IUCN. Some subspecies are in some trouble, like the Mexican and Ethiopian wolves.No they are not. There are about 200,000 in the world right now.
Sadly I am sorry to say Mexican wolves are EXTINCT in the wild :( there is a reserve in america which holds these poor wolves there (if you want to find out more please search up on Wikipedia)
It is extinct in the wild. There are some 300 surviving individuals in 49 facilities at the United States and Mexico.
No, they're the same thing.
Yes: they are extinct in the wild. There are some 300 surviving individuals in 49 facilities at the United States and Mexico.
All of them... That's what "extinct" means. Although there are no known populations of gray wolves in South Dakota, that does not mean that gray wolves are extinct. There are gray wolves in other states, such as Minnesota which has the largest population of wolves. A successful reintroduction program has been done in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming.
yes. Gray wolves and Mexican red wolves both can life in the western America, though Mexican red wolves are also believed to be a sub species of the Gray wolf, caused by a cross breeding of Gray wolves and Coyotes.
Hunting
yes they mare dead as a dodo
food and water