A tourist guide at Yellowstone filmed a wolf chasing after an elk for about 3.5 to 4 miles.
Where Washington, Idaho and Oregon meet, elk are straying from public to private lands, causing conflict and concern. If the Trump administration opens national forests further, it could get worse.
Brett French Lee Newspapers Feb 5, 2026 Feb 5, 2026 In Yellowstone National Park, the reason cats and canines don’t get along is simple — wolves will kill cougars and steal their food. A recently ...
Over the last three decades, Yellowstone National Park has undergone an ecological cascade. As elk numbers fell, aspen and willow trees thrived. This, in turn, allowed beaver numbers to increase, ...
Across North America, mountain lions, bears, and gray wolves have made a remarkable comeback over the last 50 years. Once nearly exterminated, these animals have been recovering their populations and ...
In Yellowstone National Park, the reason cats and canines don’t get along is simple — wolves will kill cougars and steal their food. A recently published study that utilized GPS collar data collected ...