Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
How did two wolves end up on this remote island thousands of years ago? Researchers think humans brought them there, then cared for them
Dogs are man’s best friend. But exactly how these furry canines came to be humanity’s closest animal companions remains one ...
Researchers say two prehistoric wolves found on an isolated Baltic Sea island may have relied on humans for food and ...
Scientists discovered ancient wolves on a tiny Baltic island where they could only have been brought by humans, suggesting an ...
Prehistoric wolf remains found on a Baltic island suggest that humans cared for wolves thousands of years before dogs fully emerged, according to a new study. Archaeologists found the remains, dated ...
With only a few hundred red wolves left, Smithsonian scientist Jennifer Nagashima is pioneering new ways to preserve their ...
Wolves became dogs via cooperation and reciprocity rather than through competition with humans "I wrote this book to remind people that the wolves we often demonize and persecute through wildlife ...
A long-term study examining wolf–human interactions in Türkiye reveals the delicate balance between ecology and society. Living close to nature does not always mean living in harmony. Across many ...
The wolves’ diet mainly consists of large ungulates such as moose, caribou, deer, elk and wild boar but they are also known ...
Park officials did not specify the nature of the concerning human-wildlife interaction, or what will be done that allows the ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results