I looked this up and didn't find wolves in South America. They were listed in North America, Europe, China, but none in South America.
The maned wolf, Chrysocyon Brachyurus, is found there. Resembling a large, long legged fox, it is the only member of it's genus, and not a true wolf.
No, there has never been a documented case of melanism in mountain lions. However, jaguars, especially in the Amazon River basin, are sometimes found to be black - melanistic.
no no
North America connects to South America on the north side of South America, nothing connects below
South America
South America extends further south than Africa.
South America is a continent. There are several Countries in South America.
South America is in the Western Hemisphere.
Wolves live in North America.
No?
no
Antarctica, Australia, Africa and South America have no gray wolves. Australia does have the dingo which is a subspecies of the gray wolf.
There are no wolves in the Amazon rainforest. In fact, there are no true wolves in South America.
Wolves are found in North America, parts of northern and western Asia, and Europe. They are not found in South America, Africa (except for Egypt), Antarctica, Australia, southeast Asia or the South Pacific.
The Maned Wolf is the largest canine in South America. also the plural of wolf is wolves not wolfs.
Wolves are native to North America.
No. The only 'wolves' in South America are maned wolves, Chrysocyon brachyurus, which are not actually wolves - they are only distantly related to other canids, hence their being placed in their own genus (true wolves belong to the genus Canis).
Wolves don't live in south america, where anacondas live. They won't meet.
No, not all wolves. =)
the answer is nothing! the united states can't do anything about it. they live in south America so there is nothing we can do.