News

In the battle for survival between wolves and deer, the prey doesn't always lose. Deer, particularly large species like ...
Hungry like the wolves. The team looked at historic deer-collision data in 63 counties—29 of which had wolves—between 1988 and 2016. The researchers matched this data with maps from the ...
Wolves scare deer and reduce auto collisions, study says By . Associated Press. Published May 25, 2021, 2:26 p.m. ET. California Department of Fish and Wildlife shows a gray wolf (OR-93), seen ...
Return of the wolves: How deer escape tactics help save their lives Date: February 27, 2019 Source: University of Washington Summary: As gray wolves return to Washington state, a new study finds ...
Wolves may help keep deer, and brainworm, away from moose Study on the Grand Portage Reservation sheds light on complex wildlife relationships.
In short, as wolf numbers increased from the late ‘80s until the late 2000s, so did whitetail deer populations. Then as wolf numbers decreased, so did whitetail deer. You won’t see wildlife managers ...
"In a pretty short period of time, once wolves colonize a county, deer vehicle collisions go down about 24%," said Dominic Parker, a natural resources economist at the University of Wisconsin, ...
It estimates that every year, wolves avert $10.9 million of damages related to deer collisions, while costing $174,000 in compensations related to injured pets and livestock—a 63-fold difference.
As wolves return to the Northwest, deer have taken notice. Researchers found deer in Washington change how they react when wolves are near – and that could eventually change how hunters hunt.
A new hunting group has formed in Minnesota and has taken on wolves and wolf management as its first major issue. Hunters For Hunters has scheduled public evening meetings for Dec. 6 in Carlton ...
Minnesota is the only state in the Lower 48 that did not kill all of its wolves. They were poisoned, shot and trapped out of the rest of the continental United States by the early 1900s, but a few ...
Could having wolves in the area help keep deer and moose apart, and thus spare moose from a deadly parasite that’s spread by deer? That’s the finding of a new study by University of Minnesota ...