There are actually (and supposedly) around 39 subspecies of gray wolf (no other wolf species have subspecies of themselves). Since this very question has been answered already, please see this related question below.
There is actually much evidence suggesting that there are not 15 subspecies of gray wolf, but rather 39 subspecies. For the names of all of those Gray Wolf subspecies, please see the related question below.
Yes. The Arctic wolf is a subspecies of the grey wolf.
Of the Gray Wolf, there are around 39 subspecies alone within this very species. Of the other wolves, namely the Ethiopian Wolf, Himalayan Wolf, Iberian Wolf, Indian Wolf (a marked possibility), and others, they are considered to be species themselves with no other subspecies to their name.
Yes
No, the Arabian wolf is a subspecies of the gray wolf.
The red wolf is no longer considered its own species. It is now scientifically named Canis lupus rufus, which means that it is a subspecies of the gray wolf (Canis lupus) and thus does not have its own subspecies.
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.
It's the other way around. Dogs are a subspecies of the Grey Wolf.
A dog is a subspecies of a wolf, so that's like asking "what arctic wolf has no wolf?".
The Tundra Wolf (Canis lupus albus) is a subspecies of the Grey Wolf.
I don't know of any other names for the Red Wolf specifically, but the scientific name is Canis lupus rufus. The red wolf is also the subspecies of the gray wolf. Hope that helped!
Domestic dogs and dingoes are both subspecies of the wolf.