These Birds Have A Mental Map Of Every Wolf Kill in Yellowstone In A Nutshell Ravens don’t follow wolves to find food.
Researchers suspect that ravens might have greater agendas behind their relationship with wolves.
Ravens follow wolves in order to dine on prey the big canines kill, a 2002 study in Yellowstone National Park claimed.
Allan Hathaway, a wildlife photographer, captured the video of the Wapiti wolf pack chasing after the lone bison in ...
New research shows ravens do not follow wolves to find food. Instead, they remember hunting areas and return later.
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 ...
Learn more about why the story of how wolves saved Yellowstone National Park’s aspens is more complicated — and more instructional — than it appears.
A wolf chases magpies and ravens from an elk carcass near Soda Butte. When wolves are on the hunt, a kill rarely goes unnoticed for long. In the elk- and deer-rich areas of northern Yellowstone ...
It’s an animal-eat-animal world out there, especially in Yellowstone National Park. There are almost 70 different mammal species in Yellowstone, and most of those can be separated into two categories: ...
Pete was visiting Yellowstone to capture the spring super bloom. What he ended up recording turned the heads of wildlife ...
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Learn how ravens in Yellowstone National Park use spatial memory and navigation to locate wolf kills across the landscape without following wolves.