If you are referring to regularly eating grey wolves, then NO, I do not. However, if you are wondering if I have ever tried a grey wolf, then my answer is no. Although this is purely a morality issue, one could eat a Grey Wolf like any other animal, if one were forced to by starvation. Skinning, cutting the meat, and cooking.
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. :)
There are only three species of wolves: gray wolf, Ethiopian wolf, and red wolf. Timber wolves are only a subspecies of gray wolves.
they eat
a wolf eats meat
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.
Last i herd the Gray wolf needs to eat up to 3.9 pounds per day
Very, it will eat all of you
The Gray wolf is Canis Lupus. The red wolf is Canis Rufus.
The red wolf is a species however there is no such species as a black wolf, therefore no scientific name. But as 'rufus' is latin for red, I guess the latin word for 'black' would be used in the 'Black Wolf' Species' scientific name.
Canis Lupus (Gray Wolf) Canis Rufus (Red Wolf)
yes a gray wolf is a scavenger! because they eat dead stuff.
they eat enough to fill up their tummy