Colorado's ongoing wolf reintroduction will change elk hunting in the state. Here are some things hunters can expect to ...
Or did the mere presence of wolves make elk so nervous they didn’t eat as many aspen, or avoided areas where they may have encountered wolves, called a trait-mediated indirect effect (TMIE)?
Or did the mere presence of wolves make elk so nervous they didn’t eat as many aspen, or avoided areas where they may have encountered wolves, called a trait-mediated indirect effect (TMIE)?
Grey wolves and coyotes, distinct North American canids, exhibit unique survival strategies. While larger wolves form packs to hunt large prey, smalle ...
"Bears are mostly scavengers and eat berries and mountain lions love deer and elk," Ritschard said. "They are different than wolves, which will kill any animal." ...
Why ask, "Why did the chicken cross the road?" when you can instead consider, "Why did the road cross the land?" ...
Do they reduce reproductive success among elk simply by creating a landscape of fear, wherein the great bulls and cows are too nervous to eat and procreate? Have wolves killed enough elk to ...
Mind-blowing facts about bats, wolves, snakes, spiders and ravens from wildlife expert Peter Gros, co-host of Mutual of Omaha ...
People tend to demonize wolves, that they are really bad, that they eat all the elk and that they put the livestock industry at risk. Neither one of those things is true. Wolves are part of the ...