Icy waterfalls and icy landscapes. (simple answer)
a cave
Scientists can probably save gray wolves by putting them in their habitat and letting them stay there.
forest
Symbiotic
Global warming can impact gray wolves by altering their habitat and food sources. Changes in temperature and precipitation patterns can shift the distribution of prey species, affecting the wolves' hunting success. Additionally, warmer temperatures can increase the prevalence of diseases that affect wolves, ultimately threatening their populations.
No, they are not! they have a different habitat, diet, etc.
anything from an artic areas to open forest an woodland areas
The habitat of a gray wolf has lots of trees and forest. The gray wolfs live mostly in idaho, Montana, Wyoming, and Oregon.
Wolves are the apex predator in most of their habitat so have no animals from which they need to escape or hide.
The gray wolf exists in many subspecies, that live from the Arctic regions, to arid deserts, and everything in between.
most wolves are harmful and that does include gray wolves
They literally have gray fur. They were the first gray coloured wolf discoverednot all gray wolves are gray they can be gray, black, white and moreIt's unknown why they are called a wolf, but they are called a grey wolf because they are usually grey but some are black, others brown, and some are albino. Others say just wolfs because they look nothing like a grey wolf.