Narrated by the British writer and environmental campaigner George Monbiot, and largely drawn from his book Feral, it ...
Learn more about why the story of how wolves saved Yellowstone National Park’s aspens is more complicated — and more instructional — than it appears.
Ravens follow wolves in order to dine on prey the big canines kill, a 2002 study in Yellowstone National Park claimed.
Wolves in Yellowstone National Park have experienced a 27% decline in population in 2025.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. A wolf carries a very young pup by its hindquarters in this image caught by a game camera. A new study shows that contrary to long ...
A Yellowstone wolf (Courtesy NPS/Jacob W. Frank) Editor’s note: WyoFile partnered with Mountain Journal to produce this story. If not for a series of tones broadcasting her location, no one would’ve ...
In Yellowstone’s wild chess match between wolves and cougars, it turns out the real power play is theft. After tracking nearly a decade of GPS data and thousands of kill sites, researchers found that ...
Ecosystems change when keystone species restore balance. Philanthropy can learn from nature by funding the actors, infrastructure and relationships that allow complex systems to regenerate.
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.
When wolves are on the hunt, a kill rarely goes unnoticed for long. In the elk- and deer-rich areas of northern Yellowstone National Park, ravens are often among the first scavengers to arrive on the ...
Wildlife cameras positioned throughout Yellowstone National Park have captured something researchers didn't expect to see. Adult wolves have been hauling their helpless pups across vast distances ...
New research shows ravens do not follow wolves to find food. Instead, they remember hunting areas and return later.