Species-wise, there is no difference between a dog and a wolf. Both dogs and Grey wolves belong to the species Canis lupus. The domestic dog is a subspecies of the Grey wolf, that has overtime been artifically bred to produce various traits to help serve humans.
One difference is that dogs bark but wolves never bark.
Labs are usually domesticated dogs and extremly obedient. Wolves are wild dogs and hunt for themselfs and live in a pack. To labs, their pack is their owner.
There are many differences between a wolf and a dog. Wolves are not dogs. Dogs are bred from wolves and have most of their wolf-like characteristics bred out of them. The osteology is different, the size and shape, fur type, psychology and behavior,etc etc... See the Related Links for more information about the differences between wolves and dogs.
No. If they're wolves, they're wolves. There's no way they'd become dogs.
The dog is a member of the wolf family. Actually, wolves are their ancentors. Wolves attack and hunt and defend, also looking like dogs. The only difference, is that dogs are tame. Some people call dogs 'Tame Wolves'.
A wolf is a canine (related to dogs.) A wolverine is a mustelid (related to weasels.)
No, they're the same thing.
dogs descend from wolves, male wolves are a type of dog
The key differences between dogs and wolves are in their behavior, appearance, and genetic makeup. Dogs have been domesticated over thousands of years, leading to more varied appearances and behaviors compared to wolves. Wolves are wild animals with a more uniform appearance and behavior, living in packs and hunting for food. Dogs have been bred for specific traits by humans, leading to a wide range of sizes, shapes, and temperaments. Wolves are typically larger and have a more instinctual behavior compared to dogs. Additionally, dogs have adapted to living with humans, while wolves remain wild animals.
dogs came from wolves but wolves are not trained they came from the wild sierra123456789
Wolves howl, dogs bark Wolves are generally taller than dogs Wolves live in packs in the wild, dogs live by themselves Wolves are more intelligent than dogs, but are also more aggressive towards humans. Wolves hunt for prey, dogs usually eat leftovers and are not much of hunters of live prey. Wolves and dogs can interbreed. The German Shepherd is one of the best examples of a wonderful house dog that can be trained to be a guardian dog, has the fierceness of a wolf, and the gentleness/faithfulness of a dog.
Wolves Eat Dogs was created in 2004.