Wolf Pup Migration Study Iruna
A wyoming trail camera captures the western wolf pack's breeding female carrying a young pup from the den site to a rendezvous site in june 2020 Instead, preying on what was available in their immediate areas The pup is estimated to be between 1 and 2 months old
Wolf-Gordon: Digital Migration Parchment 1894630 | Material Bank
Wyoming game and fish department as elk migration patterns shift with changing environmental and anthropogenic conditions, some wolf packs in wyoming are doing something never before. Some wolves moved young pups to homesites closer to migratory elk summer range, challenging assumptions about escaping predation as a benefit of ungulate migration. To explore how elk migration patterns impact wolf behavior, the researchers used gps collars to track the movements of 19 gray wolves and 99 elk in the eastern greater yellowstone ecosystem between 2019 and 2021.
Trail cam footage shows a wolf carrying her pup to a new den site to stay close to migrating elk herds
Wyoming game and fish the findings have significant implications for wildlife. A wolf carries a very young pup by its hindquarters in this image caught by a game camera The researchers captured a game cam image of a wolf carrying a young pup while migrating to a new location in june 2020. Wolves are relocating their pups to follow elk migrations altered by climate change, revealing surprising adaptability and ecosystem shifts.
A trail camera photo shows a female gray wolf carrying a young pup from a den site to a new pack rendezvous site in early june 2020 The pup is estimated to be between one and two months old. Highlight dynamic predator responses to prey with variable migratory behavior Wolves tracked partially migratory elk using diverse movement tactics, including migratory coupling
