Canis Essays

  • Animalia Vertebrata Mammalia Carnivora Canidae Canis Lupus And Animal

    2362 Words  | 5 Pages

    ANIMALIA VERTEBRATA MAMMALIA CARNIVORA CANIDAE CANIS LUPUS AND ANIMALIA VERTEBRATA MAMMALIA CARNIVORA CANIDAE CANIS NIGER Introduction: Any person who has been able to catch a glimpse of any type of wolf is indeed a lucky man. The wolf is one of the earth's most cowardly and fearful animals, and it is so sly and, pardon the expression, foxy, that it is almost a waste of time to try and catch him in any kind of trap. Although he can be cowardly and fearful, he can also be one the most vicious and

  • Gray Wolf Research Paper

    1218 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Extraordinary Canis Lupus The Canis lupus, more commonly known as the Gray Wolf, is one of the most famous species of species of wolf. Once common in North America, the Gray Wolf has had an extraordinary history within the United States. Persecuted in the early 1960s, the Canis lupus was nearly driven to extinction. Now once again on the rise due to conservative efforts, the future of the Gray Wolf remains to be seen. The Gray wolf currently inhabits Yellowstone National Park, northeast Oregon

  • The Timber Wolf

    987 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Timber Wolf has a grey but sometimes white cote. It stays with it young for about two years and then abandons the young. They will travel 60% of the winter in a herd. They travel in a pack to keep warm. They also have an alpha wolf like the lion. It it mostly found in the siberian taiga. It is related to the Grey Wolf and Mexican Wolf . The grey fur is the dominant trait for the coat.It is know that the Timber Wolf will look up in the sky and see a raven circling in a cirtain pattern to tell

  • The Gray Wolf

    652 Words  | 2 Pages

    This report is all about the gray wolf. Its scientific name is Canis Lupis. Canis is the Latin word for dog. The genus also includes jackals and coyotes. Lupis is the Latin word for wolf. Gray wolves look similar to German shepherds, but the wolf has longer legs and bigger feet. The color of a gray wolf can range from black to white, but shades of gray are the most common. A unique feature about gray wolves is that the farther north you find them, the larger they are. Males can range from (nose-to-tail)

  • Charistics: The Gray Wolf

    1148 Words  | 3 Pages

    Charistics The gray wolf ( Canis lupus), is additionally called the celebrated gray wolf, it's actuality wolf or western wolf is additionally native to the geographical region and remote areas of most of North America, the grey wolf is additionally in continent, and may even be found in geographic area. it's the one in every of the most important members of the wolf family, with males averaging concerning 95–99 avoirdupois unit, and females averaging concerning 79–85 avoirdupois unit. similar to

  • Exploring the Origins of Dog Breeds

    1182 Words  | 3 Pages

    indeed, did it come to be that there are so many different breeds of dog? Upon approaching the subject in question, one must first ask, “What are dogs?” Evolutionarily speaking, the modern domestic dog (Canis lupus familiaris) is the descendent of an ancestor held in common with the grey wolf (Canis lupus) (Melina, 2014). As their Latin nomenclature suggests, dogs are only a subspecies of wolf. Therefore, no great genetic misalignments exist to prevent successful reproduction between breeds (hence

  • Mexican Gray Wolf Essay

    1041 Words  | 3 Pages

    Introduction Origin: The focus of this management plan will be on a subspecies of the gray wolf, commonly known as the Mexican gray wolf and scientifically as Canis lupus baileyi (Wikipedia 2). Another name for the Mexican gray wolf is “the lobo” and this species originates from North America. In the United States, it is native to southeastern Arizona, southern New Mexico, and western Texas. It is also native to the northern region of Mexico (Wikipedia 2). Description: Of the gray wolves in North

  • Labrador Wolf Research Paper

    634 Words  | 2 Pages

    Labrador. These areas are very cold but thanks to their thick fur coats it is liveable. They seem to like it very much. They are used to the cold so they will most likely stay in that area. The Labrador Wolf is a gray wolf subspecies, scientific name is Canis Lupus Labradorius. This was done by the biologist Edward A. Goldman in 1937. Their fur is mainly gray and that’s why they were in the gray wolf

  • Dingo

    557 Words  | 2 Pages

    came from, it isnÕt originally from Austrailia but arrived between 3,500 to 4,000 years ago. The oldest dingo fossil is dated at about 3,400 years old. It is thought that the dingo is from the same family as the Indian Wolf, like many domestic dogs (Canis familiaris), but it has enough of its ancestors charachteristics that it has its own variety. There are two theories about where the dingo came from. One is that its relatives lived in India and were brought there by indian traders. The other is that

  • Restoration of the Red Wolf

    2349 Words  | 5 Pages

    Available at: http://www.fws.gov/southeast/pubs/alwolf.pdf Accessed: 19/02/2014 6), 8), 9) Ref: http://redwolves.com/rwc/downloads/other/rw_biology_status.pdf 2) Ref:http://redwolfssp.org/newsite/studbooks/2012_red_wolf_studbook.pdf 3) Red Wolf (Canis rufus) Recovery: A Review with Suggestions for Future Research- Journal (13 August 2013) Author: Joseph W. Hinton, Michael J. Chamberlain, David R. Rabon Jr First Edition Date Accessed: 30/03/2013 4) Studbook: http://redwolfssp.org/newsite/studbooks/2012_red_wolf_studbook

  • History of The Domestication of Dogs: Are Dogs our Companions or Are We Their Companions?

    648 Words  | 2 Pages

    further hypothesized by father-son team S.J. Olsen and J.W. Olsen (1977) that the domestication of dogs started in China. They proposed that, starting with a small subspecies of wolf, humans changed it into the modern Chinese/Mongolian subspecies of Canis lupus chanco. There is another hypothesis that even Cro-Magnons may have domesticated some breeds of dog. A piece of a dog’s right jaw was reported from a Cro-Magnon site (Nobis, 1979); the jaw was dated back to 14,000 B.P. No matter what conflicting

  • Coyote

    1335 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Coyote (canis latrans) ? Sharp fangs, mean growl, shrill cry. You may think I am talking about a new werewolf movie, but I am really talking about the coyote. It is not as fierce as it may sound, They are quite unique animals. Their ability to adapt to almost any enviorment is astounding. The Name The name coyote is a Spanish alteration of the original Aztec name coyotl. The Latin name Canis latrans, meaning barking dog, was given to it by Thomas Say, who published a description of

  • Idaho Wolves Deserve Conversation Not Eradication

    1279 Words  | 3 Pages

    roamed the Idaho mountains in great numbers at one point in history, but at the same time, they're not. The reason is they are both of the grey wolf species, but different subspecies. The former inhabitants were the Northern Rocky Mountain Wolves, or Canis lupus irremotus. These wolves are one of the largest subspecies of the grey wolves, weighing anywhere from 75 - 150 lbs., and standing at 26 - 32". When their numbers dwindled down to almost nonexistent, their cousins, the McKenzie Valley Wolves,

  • Red Wolves Case Study

    1302 Words  | 3 Pages

    wolves released in the late 80s/early 90s after they were bred in captivity, the population reached around 120 wolves in 2012. Since then, however, it has declined, and in the 2015, only 50-75 wolves remained (“Causes of mortality in wild red wolves (Canis rufus) 2012–2015”). The red wolf has massive ecological, economic, and cultural value. According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, it is both an umbrella and a keystone species. As an umbrella species, efforts to conserve the red wolf will also

  • The Reintroduction of the Gray Wolf to Yellowstone

    1484 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Reintroduction of the Gray Wolf to Yellowstone Gauss’ Law states that no two organisms can occupy the same ecological niche without excluding the other, but what happens when man gets involved with nature and tries to introduce a species where it doesn’t belong which in turn provides a second organism to fill the same niche as the first? The results of human intervention have often been disastrous for the organism that we’re supposedly helping. Humans often times do not understand the

  • The Domestication of Dogs

    837 Words  | 2 Pages

    dog, and it didn’t just happen overnight. Dogs are a man’s best friend, have evolved from wolves, and then were domesticated. We know dogs as loving and caring animals, but many hears ago they weren’t. The dog is a carnivorous, domesticated wolf (Canis lupus familiaris) of the family Canidae, to which the jackal and fox also belong. The dog is descended from the wolf. True wolves appeared in Europe about one million years ago and then are seen in America about 700,000 years later. Many people think

  • Red Wolves

    670 Words  | 2 Pages

    wolves were restricted to isolated areas along the Gulf of Louisiana and Texas” (All about). Refuges are trying to help these wonderful animals. “In 1973 the Red Wolf Recovery Sharp 2 Plan was completed and began being implemented. There were over 400 canis (the red wolves scientific name) captured between 1973 and 1980 with only a few red wolves in captivity” (Red wolf). The red wolf has numerous amounts of threats. “Gunshots, vehicle injury and death, and habitat ... ... middle of paper ... ...we

  • Wolves

    1957 Words  | 4 Pages

    the pack meets). In areas where wolves are hunted or trapped they fear people and are very wary. However, in remote places, such as in the Canadian Arctic, they show little fear and will often allow people to live near them. Two hundred years ago, Canis lupus, also known as gray wolves, were more widely distributed than any other mammal of historic times. They lived in large areas of North America, Europe, and Asia; the only places they could not occupy were deserts, tropical rain forests, and peaks

  • The Hidden Life Of Dogs: Book Review

    733 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Hidden Life of Dogs: Book Review The Hidden Life Of Dogs was written by Elizabeth Thomas who is currently well know and highly re-spected for her books. Elizabeth Thomas was born in America and currently lives in New Hampshire. This is a book that is unlike any book ever written as it takes the perspective from a different angle. It was first published in the United States in 1993 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Elizabeth has written five books, all bestsellers. It is evident that her success

  • The Necessity of Legalizing Wolf Hunting in Wisconsin

    1302 Words  | 3 Pages

    Over the past several years, the gray wolf, native to the Wisconsin area, has been listed federally as an endangered species due to the graphic and horrific treatment they had received during the industrialization periods of America, when they were frowned upon and hated because they are predatory creatures and did, on occasion, attack livestock and pets. Because the government was encouraging the hunting, including bounties for the animals, the wolves were hunted to near extinction. However, now