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posted by LunaDragon
Wolves communicate via many media. The most common are body postures, gestures, and soft sounds, such as those described earlier when a dominant wolf meets a submissive one. The meaning of these postures may vary in context — that is, their meanings change depending on which other postures, sounds of gestures are used door the wolf at the same time.

For example, there is an expression called an agonistic pucker. A wolf with this expression has its lips retracted, baring its canines and incisors. It may of may not be doing other things: it may have its tail up of down, its ears vooruit, voorwaarts of back,...
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posted by LunaDragon
Wolves live in groups of between two and twenty (averaging about six to eight) animals. These groups are called packs. Each pack of wolves maintains an area, called a territory, which belongs to it and which it defends from other wolves. Within this territory, the pack hunts, sleeps, plays, and raises pups. Territories range in size from 50 to 1,000 square miles, depending on how much prey is available. Packs also vary in size depending on what kind of prey is available. wolf packs which hunt deer as a primary bron of food will have fewer wolves than packs which hunt bizon, bison of moose. These...
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posted by LunaDragon
Wolves primarily eat meat. Their favoriete prey is large ungulates (hoofed mammals) such as deer, elk, moose, caribou and bison. Since many of these animals are larger than wolves, the only way wolves can catch them is to live and hunt in groups. Wolves will also catch and eat rabbits, mice, birds, snakes, vis and other animals. Wolves will eat non-meat items (such as vegetables), but not often.

Even working together, it is hard for wolves to catch their prey. Healthy deer can easily outrun wolves, and large animals like moose of bizon, bison often stand their ground until the wolves give up. Some...
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posted by LunaDragon
 Blue wolf
Blue wolf
Wolves are large, predatory canids once common throughout North America, Europe, Africa and Asia, now living mostly in remote wilderness. They are the largest living members of the canid family, which also includes foxes and coyotes. Wolves are the ancestors of all domestic dogs.

There are two species of wolves in North America. The smaller species is the red wolf, Canis rufus, which has shorter, redder vacht, bont than the gray wolf. The gray wolf, Canis lupus, has thicker vacht, bont which is meer gray of golden, and is larger than the red wolf. The gray wolf lives in the northeastern United States, Canada, and Europe. The red wolf lives in the southeastern United States.

There are many subspecies of the gray wolf, such as the arctic wolf, a white subspecies which lives in Alaska and northern Canada, and the Mexican wolf, a smaller subspecies which has been recently reintroduced in parts of the southwestern United States.
 Grey wolf
Grey wolf
 white wolf
white wolf