Nebraskaland

June 2023 Nebraskaland

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: http://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1500361

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April 2023 • Nebraskaland 47 the Hastings Museum in Hastings, Nebraska, and is still on display. Many reports of wild wolves occurred over the years since then, but none were confirmed until a wolf from the Great Lakes area was killed near Spaulding, Nebraska, in 2002. Present Distribution and Dispersal to Nebraska Gray wolves are the largest canid and had the widest historic distribution of all mammals other than humans, encompassing most of the northern hemisphere including almost all of North America, Europe and Asia. While they once flourished across most of North America, they are now mostly relegated to dense forests near the Great Lakes, the northern Rocky Mountains, northern California and the Pacific Northwest, Canada and Alaska. Wolves are capable dispersers and Adult gray wolves are larger than most common dog breeds, standing about 30 inches high at the shoulder and weighing 70-130 lbs. Despite the name "gray wolf," early explorers in Nebraska described their fur color as gray, dusky, white, brown, black and yellow. Wolves are predators that hunt cooperatively in a pack allowing them to focus on large herbivores like bison, elk, moose and white-tailed and mule deer. They are adaptable and will also feed on smaller animals, insects, plant matter and scavenge when needed. Unfortunately for livestock owners, and wolves themselves, they also sometimes depredate livestock. Wolves in North America are not typically a danger for people. Wolves are intelligent, cunning and highly social. They hunt in packs averaging around eight wolves that consist of a dominant pair — which produces pups for the pack and may mate for life — and their subordinate offspring of various ages. It is essentially a family group guided by the older parents. The dominant female has one litter of four to eight young each year, often in a den dug into the soil. Older wild wolves may live eight or more years. Biology More than fi ve hundred men participated in a hunt in January 1913 near Elmwood, with 11 coyotes killed. COURTESY HISTORY NEBRASKA

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