Morning Overview on MSN
Yellowstone wolves may not have radically reshaped the park after all
When gray wolves returned to Yellowstone National Park, the public heard a simple story: predators came back, balance ...
Thirty years ago, park rangers reintroduced grey wolves into Yellowstone National Park. They wanted to restore the ecosystem and get the elk population, which had decimated the plant community, in ...
Large carnivores are both clashing and coexisting in the western United States. Although wolves dominate cougars and steal their prey, cougars' shift from elk- to deer-heavy diets, paired with a ...
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 ...
Wolves usually rely on cooperation to survive. Hunting large prey such as elk typically involves multiple pack members ...
A new study documents the complex interactions between cougars and gray wolves in Yellowstone National Park and finds their ...
This winter saw the most wolves from Yellowstone National Park killed in about a century. That's because states neighboring the park changed hunting rules in an effort to reduce the animals' numbers.
If you need a minute of Zen in your day, this video shared by National Park News on Instagram will do the trick. It shows a pack of very sleepy wolves chilling (quite literally!) in the snow as if it ...
A new scientific review challenges the headline-grabbing claim that Yellowstone’s returning wolves triggered one of the strongest trophic cascades on Earth. Researchers found that the reported 1,500% ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results