Morning Overview on MSN
Wolves are now hunting sea otters and nobody knows why
Along a remote stretch of the Alaskan coast, gray wolves have quietly rewritten the rules of what a top land predator eats.
New research broadens our understanding of how gray wolves interact with and influence aquatic habitats. On Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, gray wolves have been observed engaging in an unusual ...
University of Montana researchers have shown that people can feel more negative toward wolves when reminded of their ...
Stephen Capra writes, Republicans can now show real leadership by silencing the Representatives who believe torture of ...
Across two studies involving over 2,200 participants from nine states with wolf populations, we found a striking pattern.
AZ Animals on MSN
Wolves are quietly making Wisconsin roads safer for drivers
Gray wolves are currently listed as endangered under the Endangered Species Act in most of the lower 48 states, except for ...
A new study compares Montanans’ tolerance for wolves versus their tolerance for hunting them. Its conclusions might surprise ...
EUREKA, Mo. — Locals call them "ghost wolves." To scientists, they're "Gulf Coast canids." To the world's most endangered wolves, they may be a savior. A population of unique animals near Galveston, ...
A long-term study examining wolf–human interactions in Türkiye reveals the delicate balance between ecology and society.Living close to nature does ...
In California, as wolf numbers grow — a remarkable return after a century — livestock producers are increasingly worried as these predators occasionally take down cattle. Gray wolves are an endangered ...
Live Science on MSN
Did reintroducing Wolves to Yellowstone really cause an ecological cascade?
Previous research on the effect of wolves on the food web has been criticized, raising questions about the predator’s role in the Yellowstone ecosystem.
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