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         Wolves Wild:     more books (100)
  1. Wild, Wild Wolves (Step into Reading) by Joyce Milton, 1992-03-10
  2. Wolves and Other Wild Dogs: Book Author, Mary E. Reid (World Book's Animals of the World) by Mary E. Reid, 2000-08
  3. The Last Wild Wolves: Ghosts of the Rain Forest by Ian McAllister, 2007-10-19
  4. Spirit of the Wild Dog: The World of Wolves, Coyotes, Foxes, Jackals and Dingoes by Lesley J. Rogers, Gisela Kaplan, 2003-10-01
  5. Wolves (Predators in the Wild) by Welsbacher, Anne, 2001-01-01
  6. The Best Book of Wolves and Wild Dogs (Best Books of) by Christiane Gunzi, Mike Rowe, 2003-04-25
  7. Wolves, Wild Dogs, and Foxes (Secret World of) by Theresa Greenaway, 2001-04
  8. Wolf Pack: Tracking Wolves in the Wild (Discovery!) by Sylvia A. Johnson, Alice Aamodt, 1987-10-01
  9. Wild Dogs : Wolves, Coyotes and Foxes (Kids Can Press Wildlife Series) by Deborah Hodge, 1997-08-01
  10. Shadow Mountain: A Memoir of Wolves, a Woman, and the Wild by Renee Askins, 2004-01-06
  11. Wolf: Spirit of the Wild : A Celebration of Wolves in Word and image
  12. Wild Dogs: The Wolves, Coyotes, and Foxes of North America by Erwin A. Bauer, 1994-11-01
  13. Wolves (Our Wild World) by Laura Evert, 2000-09-01
  14. Women Who Run with the Wolves:Myths and Stories of the Wild Woman Archetype by Clarissa Pinkola Estes, 1992-05-01

1. NOVA Online | Wild Wolves
Presented by the PBS program Nova, this resource explains what a wolf howl is and the connection between wolves. Includes resources for teachers. Hear the call of the wild, find out how wolves are making a comeback, and discover the ancient connection between dogs
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/wolves
What's in a wolf's howl a calling card, a warning, or an invitation? Hear the call of the wild, find out how wolves are making a comeback, and discover the ancient connection between dogs and wolves at this Web site.
Text Wolves Home
What's in a Howl Ed Bangs Wolf-Dog Connection ... To print
NOVA Online is produced for PBS by the WGBH Science Unit

2. Wild Animal Watch: Wolves
Observe wolves in their natural habitat with wildlife experts the Alligator River, and the Great Smoky Mountains. Follow Wild Animal Watch and learn how wolves live and survive.
http://teacher.scholastic.com/wolves
MEET THE EXPERTS
Host Roland Smith

Wildlife Vet Dr. Mark Johnson

Radio Tracking Specialist

Species Coordinator Will Waddell
... Teacher's Guide Wild Animal Watch has been on the prowl! They have investigated wolves from Yellowstone National Park, the Alligator River, and the Great Smoky Mountains. Follow Wild Animal Watch and learn how wolves live and survive. Read journal entries from field biologists, read an interview with a wildlife veterinarian, and learn why wolves are afraid of humans. Check out the Project Structure in the Teacher's Guide to find out more about what this project offers. All About Gray Wolves All About Red Wolves Meet the Host Gray Journal ... Teacher Store
Read our

3. Wild KingdomWolves
The call of the wild is the sound of the wolf pack, and even where these a settingthat vividly recalls the early days of America, two stately wolves strike a
http://www.spiritwheels.com/index.php?selection=Wild Kingdom:Wolves

4. Mission Wolf : Wild About Wolves - Keep Wolves Wild.
MissionWolf. Wild about Wolves Keep wolves wild. Native The messageof the Mission Wild about Wolves - Keep wolves wild. For
http://ruralwideweb.com/mw.htm
MARKETPLACE
WELCOME
News, information
and tools... for
rural and small-town America! Features
About RuralWide Web

Order/Contact info

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The Art of Season Extending at High Altitude
Mission:Wolf
Wild about Wolves - Keep Wolves Wild.
Native Americans respect the Wolf as a teacher of life and death ecosystems. Mission:Wolf is a peaceful sanctuary for once ex-pet wolves and wolf hybrids in the remote Wet Mountains of Southern Colorado. The Mission not only educates people in 26 states with workshops a traveling wolf program but also provides daily care to 38 wolves and hybrids, caretakers 73 acres and supports an all volunteer staff with on State or Federal aid. HELP Support Wolf Education by purchasing a circle of the wolves T-shirt or sweatshirt or a full color poster featuring resident wolves. E-mail to Mission:Wolf . Also check out the official Mission Wolf web site at http://www.indra.com/fallline/mw.

5. Colorado Wolf & Wildlife Center - Still Want A Wolf
If you love the wolf then let wolves be wolves wild and free, and dogsbe dogs. Wolves do not make good pets because of their wild nature.
http://www.wolfeducation.org/want.htm
"If someone tells you they have a wolf hybrid that sleeps by the fireplace, gets along with small children and pets, obeys on command, is a good watchdog, is house trained, barks, or is social, then they own a dog." I speak generally of high percentage hybrids. Think first before you take on a life that is in your hands. If you love the wolf then let wolves be wolves wild and free, and dogs be dogs. Items you should consider first:
  • As a potential owner are you willing to have this animal for its entire life? Wolves/wolf hybrids can live 10-14 years in captivity. Once bonded with you and then given up, most have difficulty adjusting. Endless pacing, weight loss, depression, and grieving are symptoms to expect.
    Wild wolves have a range of between 100 to 1000+ square miles of territory, and even though your hybrid is socialized, he still has wolf genetics, which make him long to be free.
    Wolves are extremely social animals. They live in packs, which are their families. Are you prepared to have a companion for him?
    There is no proven rabies vaccination for wolves/wolf hybrids. Many veterinarians will not accept or even treat them. If your hybrid bites, chances are he faces death. Also remember if your hybrid does something to cause legal confrontation this reflects back on the wild wolf.

6. Discovery Online, Feature Stories -- Born To Be Wild
There's a fine line between keeping these wolves wild and tracking them in the I'mused to working with truly wild wolves, which are awfully smart creatures.
http://www.online.discovery.com/stories/nature/wolves/report3.html
Blue Range Wolf Recovery Area, Ariz., June 7 At day's end yesterday, our pursuit of the Hawk's Nest pack of Mexican gray wolves had taken us over a couple dozen miles of broken, heavily forested country, the passage made more difficult by steep canyons and rushing streams full of water from a near-record snowmelt. While the rest of the biologists went off to monitor the Campbell Blue pack and disassemble a trap set for a former member of that pack it was bothering a nearby rancher's cattle team leader Diane Boyd-Heger and I tracked the Hawk's Nest pack down the length of a washboard Forest Service road to U.S. 191, a two-lane highway. Bouncing along in Diane's battered Ford pickup was easier work than collecting wolf scat, to be sure, but hard on the lower back and kidneys all the same. I found myself breathing a small sigh of relief when Diane stopped the truck every few hundred yards to take radio telemetry readings of the pack's progress. While she was busy, I scanned the hillsides and meadows with my binoculars. I'm convinced the wolves took cover purely to deny me the chance to spot them running free. We crossed over U.S. 191, heading toward the Blue River. Diane glanced at the map and said, "We've never tracked them this far east before. I wonder what they're up to."

7. Wild Wolves
Wild Wolves, $19.95. Series NOVA Grade level Grade 4+ Closed captionedIn stock items ship within 48 hours 1 hr. (VHS). Home video
http://main.wgbh.org/wgbh/shop/products/wg2415.html
Wild Wolves
document.writeln(""); Series: NOVA
Grade level: Grade 4+
Closed captioned
In stock items ship within 48 hours 1 hr. (VHS)
Home video use only

Hosted by Sir David Attenborough, this film visits wolves from around the world in their natural habitat, revealing never-before-seen behavior. Special photographic techniques, including the use of infrared lighting, reveal wolves slipping through an Eastern European city at night as they move from one hunting ground to the next.
item # wg2415
Related Products
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document.writeln(""); 1 hr. (VHS) The Great Wildlife Heist document.writeln(""); 1 hr. (VHS) WGBH.org Contact Us Can't find it? Call 1-888-255-9231

8. Wolves World In The Wild
wolves, graphics, and links, history of wolves, and the progress they've made in avoiding extinction
http://www.angelfire.com/ok/wolvesworld
There was a time when close to 700,000 wolves claimed North America as their home. Now the vast majority of surviving wild wolves live in the Canadian wilderness. Canada has more wild wolves than any other country in the world, numbering around 50,000. It was Canadian wolves that were transported to Yellowstone National Park, to begin the reintroduction process there. Yellowstone is now a great success story for the wolf, even the park itself has prospered financially due to the hundreds of people flocking to see wolves in their natural habitat. Unfortunately for the Mexican Gray Wolf, we are not seeing these positive results in other areas of the United States. Many of the wolves that have been reintroduced to the wild have been shot to death. In hopes of keeping better tabs on their whereabouts and health, most wolves now being released are fitted with radio collars. If you ever have the opportunity to look into the eyes of a wolf, you'll realize your not looking into the eyes of just any animal, this one is thinking, with an intelligence you are NOT used to seeing in any animal. The Gray Wolf
Different types of wolves
    • Timber Wolf - The male stands 3 ft. at the shoulder with the average weight being 100 lbs., but can be as much as 175 lbs. Earlier in the century these animals were labeled as troublesome livestock killers and were wiped out of Yellowstone Park. In 1995 Canadian grays were reintroduced to repopulate the park, today there is marked success, even though cattle ranchers of the area are still protesting there presence.
  • 9. Lioncrusher's Domain -- Information On Wild Carnivores
    Taxonomy and biology of wolves, hyenas, wild cats and dogs, and other wild carnivores.
    http://www.lioncrusher.com/
    visitors since March 15, 2001! Image Linking Policy: Please Read! Search Lioncrusher's Domain:
    Latest updates
    Picture Gallery (3/8/2003 8:54:12 PM)
    Until I can find a new webhost just for the image archives, the majority will be down at the moment. I realized that the image galleries were a problem when I checked my server stats and saw 1.2 GB of bandwidth used in two days, and I am only given 10 GB in per month, and charged for any bandwidth over that. The wolves galleries are still up, since that is the most popular, I believe, and will continue to be up as long as it does not continue to be a problem. If anyone knows of a cheap webhost that has tons of space (around 200 mb would be nice) and unlimited or a lot of bandwidth (definitely over 10 GB/month) then let me know so I can move my galleries there. In the meantime, enjoy the wolf images. Big news (2/17/2003 5:45:42 PM) Several things, people. The image galleries aside, I have reconstructed my e-card shop. No more annoying banner ads! I finally broke down and downloaded a free cgi script to run it exclusively from my site. Better things ahead... Also, if you notice at the bottom of every single page (at least the animal info, image galleries and artwork section so far) there is a footer line with lines to My Email, the guestbook, Recommend this page, the Glossary, and the anti-hotlinking message. This was created for easier access and to facilitate feedback. The Recommend this page is a neat script that allows the visitor to recommend specific pages within the site, ie: the page you are on when you click the link. If you want to recommend the site itself, go to the main page (this one) and click the link below. Its that simple.

    10. Wild World Of Wolves
    Learn about the history of wolfs, the importance of preserving them, the meaning of packs, and listen Category Science Biology Mammalia Carnivora Canines wolves......The Wolf Pack. The COOLEST PUPPY page on the net. Hear the wolves sing. What goodis a wolf. Where did wolves come from? Where the heck are all the wolves?
    http://www.boomerwolf.com/wolfwrld.htm
    Categories The Wolf Pack The COOLEST PUPPY page on the net Hear the wolves sing What good is a wolf ... How many different types of wolves are there? See me in the movies Boomer's Very Own Wolf Home Videos CLICK ON ANY CATEGORY TO START YOUR ADVENTURE! SHORT COURSES Gray Wolf Red Wolf THESE PAGES ARE LOADED WITH AWESOME WOLF PICTURES! Categories The Mexican Wolf What is all this WOLF TALK stuff? Really Cool Stuff Here! What is all this sort-of-like a wolf stuff? Do wolves play games? When wolves go hunting! White Wolves of the High Arctic ... Minnesota Wolves

    11. Gray Wolf
    Watch video clips and read field reports to learn about the lives of gray wolves in Mexico. Service, expect the wolves to range more freely as they become more accustomed to life in the wild. They hope that
    http://www.thewildones.org/Animals/grayWolf.html
    GRAY WOLF
    Canis lupus
    "Wolves" by Lezle Williams Vocabulary: alpha, carnivorous Physical Appearance and Characteristics: What color are gray wolves? If you said gray you're partly correct, they can also have white, red or black fur. Gray wolves are 2- 2.5 feet tall (shoulder height) and their bodies are between 4-5 feet long. Male wolves weigh on average 90 pounds and females generally weigh 80 pounds. Gray wolves can run 35 m.p.h. and can jump 12 feet. photo by Ron Wulff Habits and Reproductive Cycle: Gray wolves live in packs with 8 to 35 members. The leader of the pack is the alpha Gray wolves, like maned and red wolves, mate for life. Usually only the alpha pair breeds. Pairs mate in the winter and about 9 weeks later 2 to 14 pups are born. Pups are born blind. Other females in the pack help take care of newborn pups. Within 3 to 5 months the young pups are able to travel with the pack. Geographic Range: Presently the Gray Wolf inhabits Michigan's Upper Peninsula, northern Minnesota and Wisconsin and a large geographic range in Alaska, Canada, Europe, Middle East and Asia. The gray wolf once lived in diverse regions as Israel and Egypt. Biomes: These highly adaptive animals once inhabited a variety of biomes within North America including boreal forest, temperate deciduous forest and temperate grassland.

    12. NOVA Online | Wild Wolves | What's In A Howl
    NOVA Online. NOVA menu (see bottom of page for text links). wolves menu (seebottom of page for text links), What's in a Howl? So why do wolves howl?
    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/wolves/howl.html
    What's in a Howl?
    by Fred H. Harrington
    Professor of Ethology
    Mount Saint Vincent University, Nova Scotia
    Ask anyone about wolf vocalizations and the howl invariably springs to mind. Even though wolves bark, woof, whine, whimper, yelp, growl, snarl and moan a lot more often than they howl, it is howling that defines the wolf, and fascinates us. So why do wolves howl?
    The center of a wolf's universe is its pack, and howling is the glue that keeps the pack together. Some have speculated that howling strengthens the social bonds between packmates; the pack that howls together, stays together. That may be so, but chorus howls can also end with nasty quarrels between packmates. Some members, usually the lowest-ranking, may actually be "punished" for joining in the chorus. Whether howling together actually strengthens social bonds, or just reaffirms them, is unknown.
    We do know, however, that howling keeps packmates together, physically. Because wolves range over vast areas to find food, they are often separated from one another. Of all their calls, howling is the only one that works over great distances. Its low pitch and long duration are well suited for transmission in forest and across tundra, and unique features of each individual's howl allow wolves to identify each other. Howling is a long distance contact and reunion call; separate a wolf from its pack, and very soon it will begin howling, and howling, and howling...
    For the following examples of howling, you can "read" the sound spectrograph as you listen to the howls. For each spectrograph, the pitch of the sound is displayed on the vertical axis, so howls low in pitch are nearer the bottom, and howls high in pitch will be found toward the top. Time is represented along the horizontal axis, going from left to right, just as you are now reading this text. A howl that is unmodulated in pitch would appear as a straight line across the screen. Most howls show some degree of modulation, so they look like rolling hills or steep ridges leading to or falling away from plateaus. In addition to its so-called fundamental, or lowest frequency, most howls have harmonics, which appear as higher and higher bands of sound that run parallel to the fundamental on the sonagram.

    13. Allexperts Wild Animals Q&A
    Volunteer experts answer detailed questions about keeping wild animals such as llamas, ferrets, wolves, hedgehogs, and ocelots as pets.
    http://www.allexperts.com/getExpert.asp?Category=705

    14. Wild About Animals --
    Suzanne P. Vaughan. Information about wolves, bats, manatees and her pets.
    http://www.spvwolves.com
    Wild About Animals WE can make a difference!
    "Until You Have Loved an Animal, a Part of Your Soul Remains Unawakened"
    Hello and welcome!! I have decided to dedicate my web site to one of my passions; and that is saving the animals of this planet!! I believe that knowledge is power!! If we don't know about something, then we can't do anything about it, but once we DO know, then it is our responsibility to do something about it!!
    My primary goal is to educate us all about the problems that our wildlife encounters, as well as our domestic friends, and hopefully together we CAN do something positive about it!! I believe that each individual on this planet CAN make a difference in this life, and I hope throughout this site, together WE can make a difference.
    I have loved animals since I was a small child, and that has grown into a passion in my adult life. I hope to someday turn my passion into a career. But for right now, I would like to share my passion with you.
    I hope this site enlightens you and makes you think. I also hope that you have fun here!!
    One of my favorite animals are WOLVES. I feel that they are very misunderstood, and are a magnificent creature!! Just look at their society. I hope through education, that I can help them to thrive, and to no longer be destroyed. After all, the animals were here first, don't they deserve to thrive too?

    15. Lioncrusher's Domain Wild Carnivore Images Archives Wolves,
    Lioncrusher's wild Carnivore Image Galleries. Picturesof wolves, wild cats and wild dogs.
    http://www.lioncrusher.com/imagearchive/

    16. Wild Mountain
    Where you can roleplay wolves, dragons, and just about every other animal. Enter for details
    http://www.angelfire.com/rpg2/wildmountain
    Wild Mountain
    Click Here You reach the mountain, a dense forest surrounds it and you wonder how you will ever get through all those trees. You spy movement in a neerby tree. You look up and a wolf lands perfectly on all fours. Shes odd in coloring, black with rust underbelly and rust ear and tail tip. Her golden yellow eyes glow like fireflys in the dark, a green-stoned necklace adorns her neck, it glows like her eyes. The wolf opens her jaw in a yawn, revealing the sharpest teeth your eyes have ever set upon. Her top two fangs potrude out of her top jaw like a vampires, she speaks in a wolf like voice. "Welcome, This is Wild Mountain, where things of all sorts stay. The mountain is walked upon by both good and evil, I am the head of it all. You can come in...but be warned...the mountain can be dangerous...."
    Join
    Rules Members Crystal Falls Dark Forest Moonlit Meadows Rocky Path

    17. Wolves, Wild, Again
    wolves, wild, Again. Rachel Moloshok. The timber wolves came from Alberta andBritish Columbia (1), some of the last places where wild wolves still live.
    http://serendip.brynmawr.edu/biology/b103/f01/web3/moloshok.html
    This paper was written by a student in a course at Bryn Mawr College, and reflects that student's research and thoughts at the time the paper was written. Like other things on Serendip , the paper is not intended to be "authoritative" but is instead provided to encourage others to themselves learn about and think through subjects of interest, and, by providing relevant web links, to serve as a "window" to help them do so. Web links were active as of the time the paper was posted but are not updated. Biology 103
    2001 Third Web Report

    On Serendip
    Wolves, Wild, Again
    Rachel Moloshok
    In 1995 and 1996, wild timber wolves from Canada were released into Yellowstone Park and Central Idaho. Later, Mexican gray wolves were released into Arizona. The timber wolves came from Alberta and British Columbia (1), some of the last places where wild wolves still live. In January 1995, fourteen wolves from separate packs were trapped, taken to Yellowstone, and put into "acclimation pens". . The "acclimation pen" system worked this way: a dominant male and dominant female were placed together with younger subordinate wolves, allowing them time to figure out their new pack structure. . This is extremely important because wolves' pack structure is the key to their entire way of life. Given the time to get to know each other and establish a system of dominance amongst each other, the wolves are more likely to form a cohesive "family," and do well in their new environment. In March, the family groups were released together into the park. They were: the "Crystal Creek" pack, the "Rose Creek" pack, and the "Soda Butte" pack.

    18. Sloan, Monty
    Photographs taken of wolves in the wild. Large collection.
    http://www.mack460cx.com/

    Wolf Picture Galleries
    Free Online Tools
    Wolfphotography.com
    Main Catalog Page
    Help Save!
    Roaming Bison Outside Of Yellowstone National Park!
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    Wednesday, 25-Sep-2002 20:42:32 MDT

    19. GORP - Wolves Take Back The Wild
    Trail Finder Club Finder Top 10s Outfitters Message Boards Contests Screensavers ECards Search ACTIVITIES email to a friend Introduction The Wolf Watchers Back to the wild The Death of Wolf Ten Montana's Wolf Wars wolves in the wild wolves on St.
    http://www.gorp.com/gorp/activity/wildlife/wol_rndp.htm
    var allready_poped = 3 DisplayAds ("Top,Right,TopRight,Right1,Right2,Frame1!Top", "468", "60"); DisplayAds ("Top,Right,TopRight,Right1,Right2,Frame1,Frame2,Middle!TopRight", "120", "60");
    Trail Finder
    Club Finder Top 10s Outfitters ... Wallpaper Search:
    ACTIVITIES

    Magnificent Seven

    Demystifying Bag Ratings

    Top 10 Canoe-in Camping

    Special Issue: Family Vacations
    ...
    2003 Camping Special
    (OutsideOnline.com)
    Introduction
    The Wolf Watchers
    Back to the Wild
    The Death of Wolf Ten ... Wolf Forum
    Wolves Take Back the Wild By Pamela Parker One chilly early morning in late October of 1998, as the sun rose over Yellowstone National Park's Lamar Valley, biologist Robin Silverstein and the rest of his team of field technicians clambered up a rocky hillside and set up shop for a day of work. After assembling their telescope, booting up their handheld Hewlett Packard computer and unfolding their Crazy Creek camp chairs, the members of the Yellowstone Ecological Studies (YES) group scanned the verdant valley that has been called the"little Serengeti of North America" because of its abundant wildlife population. Elk, bison, and other big game range the meadow on the valley floor as they have for decades, but now things are changing in

    20. Lioncrusher's Domain Redirect
    Lioncrusher's Domain Information about the wild cat family (felidae), wolvesand wild dogs family (canidae), hyena family (hyaenidae), raccoon family
    http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/Vines/8591/
    My webpage page has moved HERE . You should automatically be forwarded in less than 5 seconds. If you are not, click the link above.

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