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1 s (saber-toothed cats) and Canis dirus (dire wolves).
2 opogenic influence in the early life of each wolf.
3 l species richness was highest at Darwin and Wolf.
4 technology, and an ~33,000-year-old Siberian wolf.
5 ely, is uniformly present in dogs but not in wolves.
6  of the Ivolgin mandibles were identified as wolves.
7 dogs have 2-3% higher genetic load than gray wolves.
8 overnment relaxed protections for endangered wolves.
9 nces from breed dogs, village dogs, and gray wolves.
10 arvest coincided with the breeding season of wolves.
11 using a 26-year dataset of 387 radiocollared wolves.
12 African and Eurasian golden jackals and gray wolves.
13 ing at least 15,000 y ago from Eurasian gray wolves.
14 es and her clade is basal to all living gray wolves.
15 ich are genetically more similar to Eurasian wolves.
16 mbiguous position relative to North American wolves.
17  mandibles be reliably identified as dogs or wolves?
18 ssess intermediate features between dogs and wolves.(6)(7) However, whether this morphological classi
19   We then tested how extrinsic (climate, elk/wolf abundance) and intrinsic (age) factors affected the
20 ollowing a severe winter, in years of higher wolf abundance, and with increasing age.
21                       Craniofacial thylacine-wolf accelerated regions were enriched near genes involv
22 sal is considered the principal way in which wolves adjust their numbers to prey supply or compensate
23 southern islands with weaker connectivity to Wolf and even less to Darwin.
24 ield volcanoes in the Galapagos Archipelago (Wolf and Fernandina).
25 Bonduriansky's sexual antagonism theory; and Wolf and Hager's maternal-offspring coadaptation theory.
26 he form of LCDs can serve as attractants for wolves and alter wolf diet, activity, and ranging behavi
27                                              Wolves and bears were also attracted towards LFs, wherea
28 ored that of group-hunting predators such as wolves and chimpanzees (n = 1,382 cases), hostile takeov
29 pearances reflects that poachers killed more wolves and concealed more evidence when the government r
30 yr lineage was distinct from modern Siberian wolves and constituted a sister lineage of modern Eurasi
31 me to recalibrate the molecular timescale of wolves and dogs and find that the mutation rate is subst
32              Potential hybridization between wolves and dogs has fueled the sensitive conservation an
33              Here we tested similarly raised wolves and dogs in a cooperative string-pulling task wit
34 rged from the common ancestor of present-day wolves and dogs very close in time to the appearance of
35 d is followed by the divergence of Old World wolves and dogs, confirming that the dog was domesticate
36                 However, the socioecology of wolves and dogs, with the former relying more heavily on
37 nt lineages similarly related to present-day wolves and dogs.
38 ff the lineage that gave rise to present-day wolves and dogs.
39  morphological change are largely similar in wolves and domestic dogs, but differ in two ways.
40 stituted a sister lineage of modern Eurasian wolves and domestic dogs, with an ambiguous position rel
41 cally distinct clades: Eurasian and American wolves and domestic dogs.(1) Genetic studies have sugges
42 elated to ancient Beringian and Russian gray wolves and her clade is basal to all living gray wolves.
43 ation in the frequency of encounters between wolves and individual elk, the risk of predation was not
44 hic cascade involving increased predation by wolves and other large carnivores on elk, a reduced and
45 earance, evolutionary relationships to other wolves and short life-history and ecology.
46 was nonlinear as litter size peaked at eight wolves and then declined, and litter survival increased
47                            Recent studies of wolves and trout have employed thousands of markers to r
48 ent heterozygosity is higher in dogs than in wolves and, on average, dogs have 2-3% higher genetic lo
49 different species: C. anthus (African golden wolf) and C. aureus (Eurasian golden jackal).
50 differences between the northern (Darwin and Wolf) and southern (Sta.
51 cluding previously underrepresented Siberian wolves, and assessed their evolutionary relationships wi
52 o), saber-toothed cats, American lions, dire wolves, and coyotes competed for prey resources at Ranch
53  sabertooth cats, cougars, dire wolves, gray wolves, and coyotes), including clarifying the causes an
54 hips between Pleistocene canids, present-day wolves, and dogs, we resequenced the genomes of four Ple
55                                         When wolves approached within 1 km, elk increased their rates
56  tiger, or thylacine, and the eutherian gray wolf are among the most widely recognized examples of co
57 s red foxes outnumber coyotes in areas where wolves are present.
58 ion capabilities of coyotes into areas where wolves are sporadically distributed or at low densities.
59 er, particularly in the area where bears and wolves are sympatric, where altitude is generally higher
60 tively hunting large carnivores, such as the wolf, are more likely transmitted by consumptive effects
61  availability or high removal rates maintain wolves at lower densities, limited inter-pack interactio
62 anization of Serengeti lions and Yellowstone wolves at the group level.
63 igrees and estimate recruitment in groups of wolves before and after harvest in Idaho, USA.
64 tors of dogs were separated from present-day wolves before the Last Glacial Maximum.
65 ape of some dog breeds with that of juvenile wolves begs the question if and how ontogenetic changes
66 ttempting to reduce the impacts of humans on wolf behavior.
67 itter survival increased rapidly up to three wolves, beyond which it increased more gradually.
68 igation strategies for foxes, dogs, coyotes, wolves, bobcats, mountain lions, bears, and birds (buzza
69 connectivity was observed between Darwin and Wolf, but from there only intermittently to the south.
70 detected gene flow from Pleistocene Siberian wolves, but not modern American wolves, to present-day s
71          For example, in North America, grey wolves Canis lupus are known to kill coyotes Canis latra
72 erm radiotelemetry and census data from grey wolves Canis lupus in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, U
73 atal habitat helps understand why some adult wolves Canis lupus may approach human settlements more t
74 d lowest where coyotes co-occurred with grey wolves Canis lupus.
75 monstrate the feasibility of this method for wolf (Canis lupus hudsonicus) and domestic dog (Canis lu
76                                     The gray wolf (Canis lupus) is a widely distributed top predator
77 July 2016, a mummified carcass of an ancient wolf (Canis lupus) pup (specimen YG 648.1) was discovere
78  (Petromyzon marinus) tracked for 12 h and a wolf (Canis lupus) tracked for 1 year.
79 us, 81% loss), snow leopard (P. uncia, 38%), wolf (Canis lupus, 77%) and dhole (Cuon alpinus, 95%) fr
80                              In Alaska, gray wolves (Canis lupis), brown bears (Ursus arctos), and bl
81 eder turnover in cooperatively breeding grey wolves (Canis lupus Linnaeus 1758).
82 ellowstone elk (Cervus elaphus) responded to wolves (Canis lupus) and cougars (Puma concolor), and fo
83 e-range establishment and kill rates of gray wolves (Canis lupus) are affected by the coexistence wit
84 (Cervus elaphus) to the risk of predation by wolves (Canis lupus) during winter in northern Yellowsto
85 y, recruitment and population growth of grey wolves (Canis lupus) in Denali National Park and Preserv
86 odel results with field data for a system of wolves (Canis lupus) that prey on wild boar (Sus scrofa)
87                                              Wolves (Canis lupus) would be expected to scavenge on su
88  individual brown bears (Ursus arctos), gray wolves (Canis lupus), and wolverines (Gulo gulo).
89     We explored multiple linkages among grey wolves (Canis lupus), elk (Cervus elaphus), berry-produc
90                                           In wolves (Canis lupus), empirical evidence for density-dep
91  golden jackals aligned more closely to gray wolves (Canis lupus), which is surprising given the abse
92 rcoptic mange (Sarcoptes scabiei) among grey wolves (Canis lupus).
93 sfully SNP-genotyped 87%, 80% and 97% of the wolf, cat and bear samples, respectively.
94 ped to facilitate this approach (EndotorchTM Wolf Company).
95 the different actors involved and facilitate wolf conservation.
96                  Canids (especially the dire wolf) consumed prey from more open environments than fel
97                                      Whereas wolves coordinated their actions so as to simultaneously
98 stic dogs and their closest relatives (i.e., wolves, coyotes, jackals, dingoes, and foxes).
99 ic study using ontogenetic series of dog and wolf crania, and samples of dogs with relatively ancestr
100                          The introduction of wolf culls in the US actually increased poaching activit
101 anation for changing incidence among n = 513 wolves' deaths or disappearances during 12 replicated ch
102 al games confirm the existence of both 'lone wolf' defectors and 'good shepherd' cooperators, and tha
103 on their actions on others' behaviour, 'lone wolf' defectors undermine initial cooperation encouraged
104 isms are likely weak due to artificially low wolf densities.
105  USA to relate spatiotemporal variability in wolf density to underlying classifications of habitat wi
106 one National Park, we assessed the effect of wolf density, prey abundance and population structure, a
107 . that claimed that sabertooth cats and dire wolves did not compete for similar prey.
108 ditionally, cattle comprised at least 22% of wolf diet from scavenging in areas with LCDs present as
109 an serve as attractants for wolves and alter wolf diet, activity, and ranging behavior.
110 , and rather support the idea that dogs' and wolves' different social ecologies played a role in affe
111 or a distance of up to 200 km on the edge of wolf distribution, there is a transition zone where the
112 ly more often and with higher intensity than wolves do, with highest-intensity movements produced exc
113 ere we provide the first genetic analysis of wolf-dog admixture in an area entirely recolonized, the
114 t trajectories, coral larvae from Darwin and Wolf drift primarily towards Malpelo and Cocos Islands,
115                                 For an adult wolf eating a relatively lean meat diet, a BMF(lim) (ave
116 e Washington wolves share ancestry with both wolf ecotypes, whereas the Oregon population shares ance
117  two phenotypically and genetically distinct wolf ecotypes: Northern Rocky Mountain (NRM) forest and
118 dark side' to conditional cooperation ('lone wolf effect') and draw implications for the adoption of
119            The model predicts that the 'lone wolf' effect is stronger than the 'good shepherd' effect
120 od shepherd' cooperators, and that the 'lone wolf'effect is stronger in the context of organ donation
121           In this issue of The EMBO Journal, Wolf et al (2019) report that the cristae carry a higher
122                   In a recent issue of Cell, Wolf et al. (2016) report that detection of the N-acetyl
123        In this issue of Cell Host & Microbe, Wolf et al. (2019) highlight the beneficial roles of gut
124           However, a recent study in Cell by Wolf et al. demonstrates that high intratumor heterogene
125  in genotyping noninvasive samples from grey wolves, European wildcats and brown bears, and we compar
126  that resemble those of consistently younger wolves, even in dog breeds that do not exhibit a 'juveni
127 ate of introgression (<2% accounting for all wolves ever detected over 1998-2017) parallels those fro
128 ic and con-generic populations was common in wolves' evolutionary history, and could have facilitated
129 rn human hunter-gatherers, who competed with wolves for limited prey but also domesticated them, lead
130 ry relationships with a previously genotyped wolf from Taimyr, Siberia, dated at 35 Kya.
131 draft genome sequence from a 35,000-year-old wolf from the Taimyr Peninsula in northern Siberia.
132 s since domestication but substantial dog-to-wolf gene flow.
133            We use the directly dated ancient wolf genome to recalibrate the molecular timescale of wo
134  dogs and wolves, with up to 25% of Eurasian wolf genomes showing signs of dog ancestry.
135 merican lion, sabertooth cats, cougars, dire wolves, gray wolves, and coyotes), including clarifying
136 alysis to evaluate caribou, moose, bear, and wolf habitat selection and movement behaviour in respons
137 tions and a multivariate approach to compare wolf habitat selection within home ranges of wolves that
138  did not find any effect of bear presence on wolf habitat selection, in contrast with our previous st
139 a to test whether the presence or absence of wolves has caused a continent-wide shift in coyote and r
140                                     European wolves have a discontinuous range, with large and connec
141                                   All extant wolves have a surprisingly recent common ancestry and ex
142 y coyotes outnumber red foxes in areas where wolves have been extirpated by humans, whereas red foxes
143  years later and across territory where gray wolves have been historically absent and remnant red wol
144            Ecological interpretations of the wolves have generated a significant amount of debate abo
145   Since their introduction in 1995 and 1996, wolves have had effects on Yellowstone that ripple acros
146  why the northern Galapagos Islands (Darwin, Wolf) have higher coral richness and cover and also reco
147              Based on dissections of dog and wolf heads, we show that the levator anguli oculi medial
148 uding fibroblasts derived from patients with Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS).
149                       It is a determinant in Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome and is overexpressed in human m
150 n of the multiple myeloma set domain (MMSET) Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome candidate 1 gene, which contain
151 otein 1 (Letm1), one of the genes deleted in Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome, encodes a putative mitochondri
152 adjacent territories since the return of the wolf in the mid-1990s.
153                    See also the editorial by Wolf in this issue.
154 hich is surprising given the absence of gray wolves in Africa and the phenotypic divergence between t
155 e three largest European populations of grey wolves in comparison with other populations worldwide, a
156 female elk to the risk of predation posed by wolves in northern Yellowstone.
157                                              Wolves in the first group are most similar to present-da
158                                     For gray wolves in Wisconsin, USA, we evaluated how five causes o
159       Using 13 years of data on 280 collared wolves in Yellowstone National Park, we assessed the eff
160 Hwech'in people, who named it Zhur, meaning 'wolf' in the Han language of their community.
161                                              Wolves, in contrast, did not hesitate to manipulate the
162 nome-wide phylogeographic patterns in modern wolves, including previously underrepresented Siberian w
163 and grizzly bears whereby, in the absence of wolves, increases in elk numbers would increase browsing
164 orously with Fresnel integrals and the Debye-Wolf integral.
165                         Domestication shaped wolves into dogs and transformed both their behavior and
166                                     The grey wolf is among the few Holarctic large carnivores that su
167                          Harvest of breeding wolves is a highly contentious conservation and manageme
168     The divergence between New and Old World wolves is the earliest branching event and is followed b
169 k to carnivore species (e.g., lions, tigers, wolves) is a well-documented occurrence and the focus of
170              Moreover, marrow was poorer for wolf-killed bulls and especially for calves than it was
171 nsity of wolf space use, the distribution of wolf-killed elk and vegetation openness.
172 ion (as indicated by per cent marrow fat) of wolf-killed elk varied markedly with summer plant produc
173 r prior together increased the likelihood of wolves killing a bull instead of a cow.
174 ely low elk abundance, increased the odds of wolves killing bulls relative to cows.
175 y large elk population increased the odds of wolves killing calves relative to cows, whereas low SWE
176 gnitive and behavioral mechanisms underlying wolf-killing.
177 t intensively studied groups of lichens, the wolf lichens (genus Letharia).
178 Tremella as a consistent fourth component of wolf lichens further challenges the conventional view of
179                             We show that, in wolf lichens, Tremella occurs as yeast cells also in tha
180                                 From a large wolf-like progenitor, unparalleled diversity in phenotyp
181 nce of introgression from the archaic Taimyr wolf lineage into present-day dog breeds from northeast
182 la provided evidence of at least one extinct wolf lineage that dwelled in Siberia during the Pleistoc
183  though the four specimens represent extinct wolf lineages, they do not form a monophyletic group.
184 ds in the local group dwarf irregular galaxy Wolf-Lundmark-Melotte (WLM), which has a metallicity tha
185 ectly classifies 99.5% of the modern dog and wolf mandibles.
186                                              Wolves may follow the winter migration of their staple p
187 roup of breeds that is genetically closer to wolves may show different behavioral characteristics whe
188  predicted computationally using the Jameson-Wolf method.
189 mance measured by total time to complete the Wolf Motor Function Test (WMFT) at the end of the 2 week
190 tcome was 12-month change in log-transformed Wolf Motor Function Test time score (WMFT, consisting of
191  Upper Extremity and Lower Extremity scales, Wolf Motor Function Test, Action Research Arm Test, Ten-
192 planet, but, over the course of a year, gray wolves move the most.
193                    Zhur is the most complete wolf mummy known.
194 ffects of domestication, we compared captive wolves (n = 12) and dogs (n = 14) living in packs under
195 est explained seasonal selection patterns of wolves near seismic lines, and whether the density of an
196  Our results suggest a continuous decline in wolf numbers in Europe since the Late Pleistocene, and l
197 mplified by the recently re-established grey wolves of the Pacific Northwest states of Washington and
198 n population shares ancestry with NRM forest wolves only.
199                             We observed that wolves outperformed dogs in their ability to follow caus
200 ulling task with conspecifics and found that wolves outperformed dogs, despite comparable levels of i
201 logy of the extinct sabertooth cats and dire wolves-overturning the idea that they heavily competed f
202 tors shaping territory overlap; for example, wolf pack size was an important predictor of territory o
203 encounter rates between simultaneous elk and wolf pack trajectories.
204           We used GPS collar data from eight wolf packs and characteristics of seismic lines to inves
205 environments suitable for each ecotype, with wolf packs established in both environmental types.
206             Over 20 winters, we monitored 17 wolf packs in Yellowstone National Park and recorded the
207  high degree of anthropogenic influence, the wolf pair tended to select areas further away from human
208                 When the female of the adult wolf pair was born in an area with a high degree of anth
209  areas further away from humans, compared to wolf pairs from natal territories with a low degree of a
210 rce selection functions and GPS data from 21 wolf pairs in Scandinavia.
211 vergent evolution and may underpin thylacine-wolf phenotypic similarities.
212        We found slight decreases in reported wolf poaching hazard and incidence during six liberalize
213                                          The wolf population in our study expanded by >1,000% during
214                           However, no single wolf population is more closely related to dogs, support
215  size and survival decreased with increasing wolf population size and canine distemper outbreaks.
216 gested these groups trace their origins to a wolf population that expanded during the last glacial ma
217 hesis that dogs were derived from an extinct wolf population.
218 t selection best described this recolonizing wolf population.
219 recent divergence between dogs and worldwide wolf populations [13, 15, 17-19].
220 ons for understanding how the restoration of wolf populations across North America could potentially
221 nt mechanisms have the potential to regulate wolf populations at high ungulate densities.
222 ern Canada, where hybridization with remnant wolf populations was common.
223  to date have primarily focused on exploited wolf populations, in which density-dependent mechanisms
224 in Eastern and Western Eurasia from distinct wolf populations.
225 t-day dogs is derived from multiple regional wolf populations.
226 y influence differences in body size between wolf populations.
227 lacial maximum (LGM)(1-3) and replaced local wolf populations.(4) Moreover, ancient genomes from the
228 ival probability), individuals did not avoid wolf predation risk to the extent that would minimize mo
229 , our results suggest that climate can drive wolf predation to be more or less additive from year to
230 y involving woodland caribou subject to grey wolf predation, DeCesare et al. (2014) show that while p
231                                              Wolf prey composition was influenced by a complex set of
232 ce climate has a strong influence on whether wolves prey on cows (who, depending on their age, are th
233 ve acquired a more tolerant temperament than wolves, promoting cooperative interactions with humans a
234                               This mummified wolf pup is important to the local Tr'ondek Hwech'in peo
235                                          The wolf pup mummy was recovered along a small tributary of
236                The explosive fate of massive Wolf-Rayet stars (WRSs) is a key open question in stella
237                                  We identify Wolf-Rayet-like wind signatures, suggesting a progenitor
238 bility and consumption by grizzly bears post-wolf reintroduction are flawed and tenuous at best.
239 grizzly bear scats to elk densities prior to wolf reintroduction during a time of increasing elk dens
240 fruit in grizzly bear scats was higher after wolf reintroduction in July (0.3% vs. 5.9%) and August (
241                           For a period after wolf reintroduction, we calculated the percentage fruit
242 ems accessible to ungulates originated since wolf reintroduction, while protected serviceberry growin
243 bear diet would be greater after than before wolf reintroduction.
244  these results to scat data collected before wolf reintroduction.
245 e exclosure originated both before and after wolf reintroduction.
246                   To address questions about wolf relationships to each other and dogs, we assembled
247      We used noninvasive genetic sampling at wolf rendezvous sites to construct pedigrees and estimat
248 nfluence of these different-level factors on wolf reproductive success followed individual > group >
249 heir evolutionary rates in the thylacine and wolf, revealing abundant signatures of convergent positi
250  the three replicates (except one locus in a wolf sample).
251                                              Wolves selected for lower altitudes in winter, particula
252 enetic analysis revealed that the Washington wolves share ancestry with both wolf ecotypes, whereas t
253 s, predicts that at least with conspecifics, wolves should cooperate better than dogs.
254     Behavioral data, collected from dogs and wolves, show that dogs produce the eyebrow movement sign
255                            At a broad scale, wolves showed evidence of habitat-driven functional resp
256 sent-day wolves, with limited gene flow from wolves since domestication but substantial dog-to-wolf g
257 he form of livestock carcass dumps (LCDs) on wolf space use, activity, tortuosity, and diet in portio
258 measures of predation risk: the intensity of wolf space use, the distribution of wolf-killed elk and
259 l networks were more highly connected, while wolf spatial networks varied seasonally.
260              The attack-behavior of a native wolf spider (Camptocosa parallela), a major nocturnal pr
261                                     The pond wolf spider (PWS, Pardosa pseudoannulata) is one of the
262 ucumber beetle (Diabrotica undecimpunctata), wolf spider (Tigrosa helluo), and nursery web spider (Pi
263 igher trophic positions in plots with higher wolf spider densities.
264 m experiment to investigate how variation in wolf spider density, which is likely to change as a func
265                    We observed no changes in wolf spider feeding ecology in association with short-te
266  catecholaminergic neurons in the CNS of the wolf spider Hogna lenta (Lycosidae) and the jumping spid
267 tructure and feeding ecology of the dominant wolf spider species Pardosa lapponica at two tundra site
268  were analyzed for Ce content or were fed to wolf spiders (family Lycosidae).
269         Given the widespread distribution of wolf spiders in arctic ecosystems, body size shifts in t
270  results suggest that body size variation in wolf spiders is associated with variation in intraspecif
271 atively associated with female size and that wolf spiders occupied higher trophic positions where adu
272 , beetle feeding increased with temperature, wolf spiders were always effective predators, nursery we
273                         Cucumber beetles and wolf spiders were equally heat tolerant (CTM50 > 40 degr
274                               In particular, wolf spiders, one of the most abundant arctic invertebra
275 ecific aggression is a major driver of adult wolf survival in northern Yellowstone, suggesting intrin
276 oser similarity of the Taimyr wolf to modern wolves than dogs, implying complex post-divergence relat
277 t for driving territory size and overlap for wolves than for lions.
278  analyzed two recovery plans for the Mexican wolf that were developed using similar data and methods
279 hree well-studied populations of extant gray wolves that differed in prey:predator ratio and levels o
280 wolf habitat selection within home ranges of wolves that were either sympatric or allopatric with bea
281   Dogs have influenced the recent history of wolves through admixture and vice versa, potentially enh
282 l debate underlying the recovery of the grey wolf throughout Europe.
283 ds indicated closer similarity of the Taimyr wolf to modern wolves than dogs, implying complex post-d
284  results suggest that a trophic cascade from wolves to elk to berry production to berry consumption b
285 ene Siberian wolves, but not modern American wolves, to present-day sled dogs.
286 opulation of C. subcristatus are syntopic on Wolf Volcano (Isabela Island, Galapagos).
287  femoral gland exudate from adults caught on Wolf Volcano.
288 ave been historically absent and remnant red wolves were extirpated in the 1970s.
289 death and disappearances of monitored, adult wolves were influenced by policy changes.
290                                        After wolves were reintroduced and with a reduced elk populati
291                We demonstrate that lions and wolves were similar in that group-level factors, such as
292 ith the two previously sequenced Pleistocene wolves, which are genetically more similar to Eurasian w
293 everity, moose density and ratio of moose to wolves, which is an index of predation risk.
294 tant blood-seeking predators, Stable fly and Wolf, while evoking avoidance responses in the prey spec
295    We identified the natal territory of each wolf with genetic parental assignment, and we used human
296                                 We fitted 19 wolves with global positioning system collars during May
297                                              Wolves with LCDs within their home ranges used areas adj
298  a common ancestry distinct from present-day wolves, with limited gene flow from wolves since domesti
299 e found extensive admixture between dogs and wolves, with up to 25% of Eurasian wolf genomes showing
300 sent as compared to no cattle in the diet of wolves without access to LCDs.
301 ased home ranges and activity as compared to wolves without LCDs in their home ranges.

 
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