A new study shows that interactions between wolves and cougars in Yellowstone National Park are driven by wolves stealing prey killed by cougars and that shifts in cougar diets to smaller prey help ...
Ravens follow wolves in order to dine on prey the big canines kill, a 2002 study in Yellowstone National Park claimed. But science isn’t static. As new methods evolve to test theories, old findings ...
Yellowstone visitors were lucky enough to witness a rare interaction between two of the park's most iconic predators.
The wolves feeding on a carcass in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming © Wirestock Creators/Shutterstock.com Wolves and ravens have long been closely associated with ...
In Yellowstone National Park, the reason cats and canines don’t get along is simple — wolves will kill cougars and steal their food. A recently published study that utilized GPS collar data collected ...
Wolves usually rely on cooperation to survive. Hunting large prey such as elk typically involves multiple pack members working together to isolate and exhaust an animal. That reality makes one ...
Editor’s note: This story first appeared in Mountain Journal. YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK — Around Crystal Creek, where the road bridges the Lamar River at the fringe of Yellowstone National Park’s ...
A new study shows that interactions between wolves and cougars in Yellowstone National Park are driven by wolves stealing prey killed by cougars and that shifts in cougar diets to smaller prey help ...