This week we are looking at the red wolf this is a canine native
to the southeastern United States. Its size is intermediate between the coyote
and gray wolf.
They have wide heads with broad muzzles, tall, pointed ears
and long, slender legs with large feet. Red wolves stand about 26 inches at
their shoulder and are about 4 feet long from the tip of the nose to the tip of
the tail. Adult red wolves range in weight from about 45 to 80 pounds.
American red wolves are critically endangered and the most endangered wolf in the world due to poaching, trapping and habitat loss. According to the USFWS, there are less than 20 American red wolves living in the wild in North Carolina.
They are shy and elusive,
however, they top predators. Potential danger lies in their becoming habituated
to humans, particularly if people provide them with food.
Their home territory can stretch about 200 miles in diameter.
They live in packs which are family groups that typically have
five to eight members, including a breeding pair and their offspring.
The young stay with the pack until they reach adulthood, when they leave to form their own packs. They are highly social animals that mate for life. They are also great parents and will sometimes care for other wolves' pups.
The packs travel up to 20 miles per day to hunt for small
mammals like rabbits and raccoons, and sometimes deer. Although pack animals the do not hunt in packs.
Wolves howl for many reasons, including to assemble the pack, find a mate, protect their pups, and identify each other.
As they are considered a top
predator, also called an apex predator, and has no known predators except
humans. Some competition between coyotes and gray wolves can lead to killing of
the red wolf but it is not due to predation.
This is a wonderful post, I love wolves. I first joined a group to protect coyotes and wolves when I was eleven. It is now called Defenders of Wildlife. Red wolves especially need our protection.
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