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Coyotes-Wolves-Cougars.blogspot.com

Grizzly bears, black bears, wolves, coyotes, cougars/ mountain lions,bobcats, wolverines, lynx, foxes, fishers and martens are the suite of carnivores that originally inhabited North America after the Pleistocene extinctions. This site invites research, commentary, point/counterpoint on that suite of native animals (predator and prey) that inhabited The Americas circa 1500-at the initial point of European exploration and subsequent colonization. Landscape ecology, journal accounts of explorers and frontiersmen, genetic evaluations of museum animals, peer reviewed 20th and 21st century research on various aspects of our "Wild America" as well as subjective commentary from expert and layman alike. All of the above being revealed and discussed with the underlying goal of one day seeing our Continent rewilded.....Where big enough swaths of open space exist with connective corridors to other large forest, meadow, mountain, valley, prairie, desert and chaparral wildlands.....Thereby enabling all of our historic fauna, including man, to live in a sustainable and healthy environment. - Blogger Rick

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Friday, December 31, 2010

People love to exaggerate the size of Wolves, Bears and Cougars. It is known that Predators tend to be larger in more Northern latitudes as well as when their prey is outsized. Wolves who feed on Buffalo and Moose tend to be bigger than those who prey on deer..........That is why I continue to feel that Gray Wolves followed Buffalo East across the Mississippi River and co-mingled with Eastern(Red) Wolves in Pennsylvania, NY, NJ and down through the Southern Appalachians....Gray Wolves preying predominantly on Bison and Eastern(Red) Wolves primarily on deer

FAIRBANKS — If you're looking for the biggest wolves in Alaska, head to the Fortymile country.

That's where legendary Alaska wolf trapper and hunter Frank Glaser caught a 175-pound male in the summer of 1939, the largest wolf ever documented in Alaska. Glaser trapped the wolf on the Seventymile River near Eagle.

"They run some big wolves in that country," state wildlife biologist Craig Gardner, who spent 20 years working in the area while stationed at Alaska Department of Fish and Game in Tok, said. While the wolf Glaser caught had a belly full of meat, Gardner captured a 142-pound male with an empty stomach in 1997 when the state was sterilizing wolves as part of a recovery plan for the Fortymile Caribou Herd. The wolf was the alpha male in a pack of 16 wolves.

"He was just enormous," Gardner said.

Wildlife biologist John Burch of the National Park Service caught a 148-pound wolf in 2001 in the Fortymile country, i.e. the Yukon Charley Rivers National Preserve. A female with him weighed 110, Burch said."They were on a moose kill," Burch recalled. "He had a stomach full of meat and so did she."

Burch has caught one other wolf over 140 pounds — a 143 pounder 10 years ago — and four that were over 130 pounds, including a 132 pounder last year.
"Any wolf over 140 I would classify as huge," Burch said.The average weight for an adult male wolf in Alaska is about 100 to 110 pounds while females average about 90 pounds. The biggest wolf in most packs almost always are the alpha males, biologists said.

"If you catch an alpha male out of a pack that weighs 120, that's representative of a big, fully grown adult," said biologist Mark McNay, who spent half of the 27 years he was at the Alaska Department of Fish and Game studying wolves before retiring in 2007.During his career at Fish and Game, McNay captured and weighed more than 300 wolves. The biggest was a 143-pound male he caught in the Alaska Range in 2003. That wolf was the alpha male in a pack of 16 and was coming off a fresh kill, he said.

The biggest female McNay has ever caught was a 118-pound wolf in the late 1980s, which he captured in the same area as the 143-pound male in 2003. The alpha male in that pack weighed about 125 pounds.

"They were in exceptionally good territory that had lots of moose and caribou in it," McNay said.

Most of the wolves in Alaska are what McNay referred to as "moose wolves" because they rely on moose for the bulk of their food. Based on loosely adhered to formula used by biologists, a wolf requires an average of about 10 pounds of food per day. That means an average wolf eats the equivalent of two moose per year.
That's a little misleading because they eat caribou, Dall sheep, a few birds, a few beaver; they eat other things," McNay said.

The weights of wolves fluctuate greatly depending on food availability. Wolves can eat 20 pounds of moose or caribou in one meal if it's available. Wolves "can pack away a lot," McNay said.

"If I caught one that was 143 pounds and it hadn't eaten for a couple days it could be the same size as a 170-pound wolf coming off a fresh kill," he said.

Other biologists agreed wolves are extreme opportunists when it comes to food.

"You find that in stomachs pretty commonly — 15 pounds of meat, hairball and bone," longtime Fairbanks biologist Rod Boertje said. "That's how you get these 140-pound wolves."

"If they have the opportunity to eat a lot they will," Burch added.

While there was no mention of Glaser's giant catch in a book chronicling his wilderness adventures titled "Alaska's Wolf Man" by Jim Rearden, wolf researcher Stanley Young, who worked as a biologist for the U.S. Biological Survey, the predecessor to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, makes mention of it in the book he wrote in 1944, "The Wolves of North America."

"A very large male collected by Frank S. Glaser, July 12, 1939, on 70-Mile River, approximately 50 miles from its mouth in extreme east central Alaska, weighed 175 pounds," Young wrote. "It was the heaviest that has been taken by any of the personnel of the Fish and Wildlife Service."There also is mention of a 172-pound male with a stomach full of meat caught in the Northwest Territories in 1947 and a 157-pound wolf shot on the Savage River drainage in the Alaska Range in 1934
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The wolves Burch handles in the Yukon Charley Rivers National Preserve are bigger than the wolves he dealt with working in Denali National Park and Preserve for 10 years. According to his figures, males in the Yukon Charley run about 5 pounds bigger than Denali Park males and females are about 2 pounds larger.

Of the 179 wolves Burch has captured in the Yukon-Charley Rivers National Preserve since 1993, the average weight for adult males is 111 pounds and for females it is 97.

In Minnesota, where he worked with wolves for seven years, Burch said, "a wolf over 100 pounds was almost unheard of."

Of the 300 or so wolves that biologist Layne Adams with the U.S. Geological Survey has handled working in Denali National Park and Preserve and Gates of the Arctic National Preserve, the biggest was a 135-pound male in Denali. Adams still remembers the size of the wolf as if it were some kind of mutant."The thing was huge to me, compared to what I normally handled," Adams said, noting the average weight of male wolves in Denali is 105 pounds. "The first thing I noticed was the size of his head. It was huge."

Most trappers don't weigh the wolves they catch because they skin them in the field, said Al Barrette at Fairbanks Fur Tannery. Even if they did weigh them, chances are they would weigh less than those handled by biologists because they've been in a trap for several days, he said.

"When trappers catch wolves they're on the move, looking for food, their bellies are empty," said Barrette, a trapper himself. "It's not too often you catch a wolf with a full stomach."Barrette weighs about 50 wolves per year that trappers bring him to skin and the biggest he has ever weighed is 128 pounds.As for talk of 150-pound wolves, Barrette said, "I'd like to see

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