Morning Overview on MSN
Yellowstone wolves may not have radically reshaped the park after all
When gray wolves returned to Yellowstone National Park, the public heard a simple story: predators came back, balance ...
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, ...
Have you ever heard of Wolf 832F, one of Yellowstone's alpha wolves? Learn all about her and how she impacted Yellowstone National Park!
The Yellowstone bubble Wolf 1331F’s fate was unusual only in that she made it so far north. When wolves leave the park, they die — often, quickly. Yellowstone’s roughly 100 wolves are among the most ...
In Yellowstone, cougars coexist with wolves by changing what they eat and where they hunt, minimizing conflict driven largely by prey theft.
Editor’s note: This story first appeared in Mountain Journal. YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK — Around Crystal Creek, where the road bridges the Lamar River at the fringe of Yellowstone National Park’s ...
Gary Lee shares more stories from his trip to Yellowstone as well as photos of wildlife, including a rare wolf sighting.
A new scientific review challenges the headline-grabbing claim that Yellowstone’s returning wolves triggered one of the strongest trophic cascades on Earth. Researchers found that the reported 1,500% ...
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