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The grey wolf

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Title: The grey wolf


1
The grey wolf
  • By Calum Davies 8R

2
The grey wolf
  • The grey wolf, also called the timber wolf,
    inhabits mountains, forests, taiga, plains, and
    tundra across northern North America, Europe, and
    Asia. One of at least 36 species belonging to the
    family Canidae, which includes the coyote,
    jackal, fox, and domestic dog, the wolf is
    characterized by powerful teeth, a bushy tail,
    and round pupils, and lives and hunts in packs.
    The family Canidae is believed to have originated
    in North America 55 million to 38 million years
    ago during the Eocene Epoch.

3
Grey wolf facts 1
  • Life span8-12 years
  • Latin name canis lupus
  • Description wolves range in colour from grizzled
    grey or black to all-white and red.
  • Size 65-80 cms high (26-32 inches)
  • Weight 55-155 pounds

4
Grey wolf facts 2
  • Population in earlier times there were thought
    to be 2 million grey wolves around the world. Now
    there are believed to be only
  • 200 000.
  • Habitat wolves can be found in forests, and on
    tundra, deserts, plains and mountains.
  • Food wolves prey mostly on hoofed animals like
    elk or deer but will sometimes prey on rabbits
    and other small mammals.
  • Behaviour wolves live in families called packs
    that are headed by the alpha female and alpha
    male. These are the main breeding pair. The rest
    of the pack are usually the offspring of the
    leading wolves. Wolves communicate through body
    postures, vocal, sent marking and facial
    expressions.
  • Offspring wolves mate in January or February.
    Females give birth two months later to a litter
    of pups. An average litter is four to seven pups.

5
Grey wolf subspecies
  • The grey wolf is only second to humans in
    adapting to the terrain and habitat it lives in.
    The coyote is a scavenger out on the plain in
    Africa, and the Arctic wolf (Canis lupus arctos)
    has adapted its fur colour to suit the snow. The
    grey wolf is the main animal, and the rest are
    subspecies, like the ones I just mentioned.

6
Loss of habitat
  • Grey wolves are losing their habitat to humans
    who are intruding and building on their
    territory, meaning that the wolves then have to
    expand their territory to compensate. This leads
    to fights with other packs over territory and
    food. Grey wolves are also starting to lose
    their food supply by more and more shootings of
    the food that they eat, such as elks, which leads
    them to leave and go else where or face death by
    starvation or being hunted illegally themselves.

7
How grey wolves have died out
  • The main ways the grey wolves have diminished
    are
  • The illegal shooting of the wolves.
  • Taking away the dens of wolves.
  • Shooting all the food.

8
Where grey wolves now live
  • After the diminishment of wolves, they are now
    starting to come back thanks to the help of
    research and public education efforts. They now
    have thriving communities of wolves in Rome,
    Spain, France, Poland, Germany, the former Soviet
    Union, Finland, Norway, and Sweden.

9
How have grey wolves adapted
  • The grey wolf has many special adaptations. Their
    coats are made up of woolly fur to provide
    insulation and long guard hairs to keep out
    moisture. The grey wolf's large paws have fleshy
    pads and claws for traction and can spread to
    provide better support in snow. Wolves have a
    sense of hearing twenty times sharper than a
    human's and have a sense of smell a hundred times
    keener. The wolf's jaws can deliver a crushing
    pressure of over 500 pounds per square inch!
    Wolves' vision is very motion sensitive. They
    have a reflective retina, called a tapetum that
    enhances their night vision. They can't see
    colour. Wolves have great stamina. They can cover
    a distance of more than eighteen miles at a quick
    trot. They have a top speed of about 40 miles per
    hour.

10
The future of grey wolves
  • The grey wolves are now being introduced back
    into the wild and are so being realised that they
    are not killers if they have enough food and
    there are enough warnings in place. We could also
    try moving some grey wolves back to isolation and
    monitor them from time to time with out
    disturbing them to see how the behave and how
    well they live on there own.
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