Wolves is an outstanding collection of photographs showing these intriguing animals in their natural habitat. It is divided into chapters on the lone wolf, wolves in winter, hunting, the wolf pack and wolf cubs. You’ll discover how wolves are adapted for hunting and running. They have big lungs and a heart that is twice as big as another mammal of a similar length and weight. They scare off wolves from another pack by adopting a low, hunched posture with mouth open and teeth arrayed in a snarl. However, when they have a broad, flat head, it indicates they are in a playful mood. Wolves features a wide variety of wolf species from around the world, including: the Eurasian Wolf, Timber Wolf, Arctic Wolf, Northwestern Wolf, Yukon Wolf, Ethiopian Wolf, Tibetan Wolf and many more. It is an introduction to an animal that has fascinated, inspired and terrified people throughout history. With full captions explaining how the species hunts and feeds, rears its young and migrates, Wolves is a brilliant examination in 150 outstanding colour photographs of this fascinating animal.
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With full captions explaining how the species and its subspecies hunts and feeds, rears its young and migrates, and whether it is endangered and protected, Wolves is a brilliant examination in 150 outstanding colour photographs of this fascinating animal.
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Introduction THE LONE WOLF These tough dogs, the biggest of the 40 or so canine species, are still the most far- flung land carnivores on Earth, ranging from the icy fringes of the Arctic and cold northern forests to the arid shrublands of Africa and the mountains of Mexico. This chapter features stunning photographs of wolves on their own and accompanying captions give fascinating facts about their environment and how they adapt to it. WOLVES IN WINTER Today’s wolves are largely animals of the taiga, the great boreal forests that ring the Arctic zones of North America and Eurasia. Few wolf populations persist south of here, but a few do live even further north, where the conifer forests fade out into tundra, a treeless land where only the hardiest creatures survive. THE WOLF PACK Typically a pack contains about a dozen adult wolves plus a litter of the cubs, but groups have been found with more than 40 members. Like any close-knit family, a wolf pack is a fractious place. Every member takes its position in a rigorous hierarchy, with the beta dogs protecting the alphas, in the hope of succeeding them one day, all the way down to the omegas, who are bottom of the heap. Wolves with no prospect of reaching top-dog status‚ generally young adults born into overcrowded packs, are hounded out by the antisocial behaviour of their superiors. THE HUNT The world’s wolves have carved out many different ways of life that see them catching fish from rivers, snatching food from lions, pouncing on lemmings buried under snow, and bringing down moose ten times their size. The wolf kills with its teeth, but this is not its primary weapon. As well as being equipped with good night vision, sensitive hearing and an acute sense of smell, the wolf’s most deadly dimension is its stamina. WOLF CUBS Born into a litter of at least five and perhaps as many as three times that number, a wolf cub begins life in a hidden den kept warm by its mother, the alpha female. Outside, the alpha male and the rest of the pack are keeping the den safe from attack. At the age of ten weeks, all cubs will be out of the den, exploring the surroundings under the watchful gaze of their elders.
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Over 200 outstanding colour photographs of one of nature's great predators

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781782747673
Publisert
2019-04-14
Utgiver
Vendor
Amber Books Ltd
Vekt
1324 gr
Høyde
303 mm
Bredde
233 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Forfatter

Biographical note

Tom Jackson is a leading natural history writer based in the United Kingdom. As an author and contributor he has worked on more than 60 books. A zoology graduate from the University of Bristol, he has also worked as a zookeeper and in safari parks in Zimbabwe.