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0:20
Wild grey wolf scavenging for food outdoor on National Reserve
Nov 14, 2018
Adobe
Spotmatik
1:02
Humans and canines forged a mutually beneficial relationship long ago. Scavenging wolves bonded with humans, who benefited from early warnings against danger. Some scientists even believe early humans and wolves hunted together! #DogHistory #CanineDomestication #Wolves #DogsBestFriend #AnimalEvolution From: Ancient Lost Worlds S1 Ep1 | Odyssey - Ancient History
2.3K views
4 months ago
Facebook
Odyssey - Ancient History
1:25:16
Wolves vs Deer: When Predator Meets Prey
10.7K views
Nov 9, 2024
YouTube
Real Wild
0:37
It’s true, wolves are master excavators. Den digging is deeply instinctual, especially in females, even if they’re not pregnant. Hormones during breeding season can trigger this nesting behavior whether or not pups are coming. Sometimes younger or non-breeding females will dig as a way to “practice” denning behavior or prepare for future seasons. It can also serve a social role, showing maturity and readiness for motherhood. Wolves may dig shallow pits or dens simply for: Cooler temperatures dur
48.2K views
1 year ago
Facebook
Roam Wolfdog Sanctuary
0:46
Black wolf gorges on roadkill deer
10K views
Dec 20, 2024
YouTube
Voyageurs Wolf Project
Wolves Are a Critical Keystone Species In a Healthy Ecosystem | Wolf Conservation Center
Aug 28, 2016
nywolf.org
0:30
The Hunting Habits of a Wolf
86K views
Apr 19, 2025
YouTube
Nature’s Reflection
1:03
How wolves evolved into the dogs we know today
3 months ago
MSN
Crushin' It
Voyageurs Wolf Project on Instagram: "Some great footage illustrating how wolves will readily scavenge roadkill when it is available. Wolves have an uncanny knack for finding roadkill deer (and other roadkill animals) quickly in our area. And when wolves find it, they gorge themselves. This young black wolf, which looks like a pup to us, appears as though it has a basketball in its stomach because it has eaten so much. Much of the reason wolves gorge themselves is to prevent scavengers like eagl
23.8K views
Dec 20, 2024
Instagram
voyageurswolfproject
9:01
A lone Yellowstone wolf takes on a coyote pack
273.8K views
Jun 14, 2021
YouTube
Yellowstone Video
10:22
When wolves chose humans: Evidence of an ancient bond
4 months ago
MSN
History With Kayleigh Official
2:54
Wolf Hunting Tactics | National Geographic
1.8M views
Nov 11, 2009
YouTube
National Geographic
1:35:03
Living with Wolves, 2005 Documentary #wildlifedocumentary #wolfpack #wildanimals
43.5K views
Jun 13, 2023
YouTube
Missys Domain
Pubity on Instagram: "😭 Wolves were domesticated thousands of years ago when some began scavenging near human camps, taking advantage of leftover food. The calmer, less aggressive wolves were tolerated by humans and gradually formed a mutual relationship, offering protection and help with hunting in exchange for food and shelter. Over generations, humans selectively bred these friendlier wolves, eventually leading to the domesticated dogs we know today. (Tovstukha Ivan via ViralHog) #dogs"
3.2M views
6 months ago
Instagram
pubity
1:06
WOLVES Chase GRIZZLY BEAR Yellowstone National Park
54.8K views
May 31, 2022
YouTube
Corbin Maxey
2:52
Determined Wolf Catches Young Calf | BBC Earth
5.1M views
Feb 28, 2019
YouTube
BBC Earth
1:31
How Wolves Became Dogs The Real Story of Domestication
3 months ago
YouTube
Wild Alliances
In the Valley of the Wolves
Jun 22, 2011
PBS
0:56
The best pool parties include wolves 🐺 With webbing between their toes, wolves are strong swimmers and capable of swimming far distances in search of food, territory, and mates. British Columbia's coastal island wolves live a unique existence along the intertidal zone. Swimming and scavenging along the remote beaches, these wolves live with two paws in the ocean and two paws on land. When hunting for food, "sea wolves" can swim for miles - one wolf was recorded swimming 7.5 miles between island
350.9K views
Jul 27, 2020
Facebook
Wolf Conservation Center
6:27
Wolves saved Yellowstone National Park - The Northern Range
564.8K views
Jan 5, 2021
YouTube
One Minute Explore
4:41
How Did Wolves Evolve? | National Geographic
186K views
Nov 10, 2010
YouTube
National Geographic
1:05
When Wolves Soar (in slow motion)
29.2K views
Sep 25, 2019
YouTube
Wolf Conservation Center
5:48
The Wolves That Changed Rivers
85.3K views
May 25, 2015
YouTube
Kim Janssen
43:10
Wandering Wolves - Nature Documentary, Part 1
157.1K views
Jan 27, 2022
YouTube
Get.factual
6:34
How Wolves Brought Yellowstone Back to Life
109.9K views
Aug 29, 2021
YouTube
National Park Diaries
8:05
Hunting with Wolves
151 views
Nov 7, 2024
YouTube
Nature Vault
1:51
Fifty Wolves Howling
358.2K views
Oct 27, 2018
YouTube
Wolf Conservation Center
5:22
How Wolves Saved Yellowstone
359.6K views
Jun 17, 2020
YouTube
Everything Science
52:44
Return of the Wolves: How Yellowstone's White Wolf Saved the Park’s Ecosystem
98.3K views
Nov 23, 2024
YouTube
Wild Habitat - Nature Documentaries
4:09
Wolves 101 | Nat Geo Wild
4.4M views
Mar 8, 2019
YouTube
Nat Geo Animals
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