Hosted on MSN
Yellowstone Wolves Thrive Inside the Park — but Here's Why Many Don't Survive After Crossing the Border
Yellowstone National Park is home to several wild animals. Tourists are allowed to spot them only from a distance to ensure their safety and the animals' protection. The national park goes above and ...
Large carnivores are both clashing and coexisting in the western United States. Although wolves dominate cougars and steal ...
Touching wild animals, especially in National Parks, is both dangerous and illegal. Even so, many people make headlines every year for getting far too close to potentially threatening animals.
A coyote in Yellowstone was lucky to escape after it got a little too close to a pack of wolves feasting on a bison carcass, and one wolf chased it ...
Tourists visiting Yellowstone National Park on October 6 were left stunned after witnessing a man walk straight toward a wild wolf pack in what authorities are calling a highly dangerous and reckless ...
Green Matters on MSN
A poacher is believed to have killed a beloved Yellowstone wolf
Yellowstone is grieving after a poacher is believed to have shot and killed a prominent wolf from the park's most famous pack ...
A new study documents the complex interactions between cougars and gray wolves in Yellowstone National Park and finds their ...
Yellowstone wolf watchers were gathered in awe on the morning of Oct. 6, ogling a pack of at least five black wolves roaming through the sagebrush near Lamar Valley. But the crowd soon saw something ...
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 ...
In Yellowstone, cougars coexist with wolves by changing what they eat and where they hunt, minimizing conflict driven largely by prey theft.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results