On Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, gray wolves are doing something unexpected: hunting sea otters. This surprising dietary shift appears to have notable implications for both ecosystems and wolf ...
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What happens to ecosystems when you restore iconic top predators? It's more complicated than you might think
Across North America, mountain lions, bears and gray wolves have made a remarkable comeback over the last 50 years. Once nearly exterminated, these animals have been recovering their populations and ...
In Yellowstone National Park — where gray wolves were reintroduced starting in 1995 — researchers have gone back and forth on whether the restoration of wolves has impacted the ecosystem. The idea is ...
New research published in Nature Scientific Reports reveals how gray wolves in Isle Royale National Park seasonally alter their habitat preferences to align with beavers’ habitat preferences, a shift ...
Please join us for the discussion “Fostering Peaceful Coexistence Among Humans, Livestock and Wolves” on Saturday from 6:30-7:30 p.m. at the Third Street Center in Carbondale. Recovering and living ...
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Did Yellowstone’s wolves really transform the park? A new debate says it is more complicated
Few modern wildlife stories are as famous as Yellowstone’s wolves. After wolves were reintroduced to the park in the 1990s, the comeback became linked to a powerful idea: predators returned, elk ...
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