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Its skull is very like the Eurasian wolf, but the legs are shorter.
In the park there exist wild boar, eurasian wolf, red fox, European hare, brown bears and wildcats.
Compared to Indian wolves, Eurasian wolves are larger, and have longer, broader skulls.
Endangered species that inhabit the range include Spanish Imperial Eagle and the Eurasian wolf.
Because of this, Eurasian wolves tend to be more adaptable than North American wolves in the face of human expansion.
The Šarplaninac has been known to fight or chase off a eurasian wolf, eurasian lynx and even Balkan bears.
Eurasian Wolf (Canis lupus lupus)
The Spanish Outlaw, that revealed the ability of the Eurasian wolf to maintain a foothold in the country's northern hills, despite its age-old conflict with village communities.
Unlike North American wolf hunts which were partaken by ordinary civilians, Eurasian wolf hunts were an activity usually reserved for the nobility.
Squirrel, weasel, Spanish Ibex, rabbit, roe deer, genets, boar, hare, garden dormouse, Eurasian wolf, badger and fox.
The Indian subcontinent includes three diverse, distinct wolf lineages - Indian wolf, Tibetan wolf and Eurasian wolf.
Compared to their North American cousins, Eurasian wolves tend to have longer, more highly placed ears, narrower heads, more slender loins and coarser, tawnier coloured fur.
Its fauna numbers 56 species of animals, and includes, among others, the Onager, Goitered Gazelle, Corsac Fox, and Eurasian Wolf.
The wolves of the Italian and Iberian peninsulas have morphologically distinct features from other Eurasian wolves and each are considered by their researchers to represent their own subspecies.
The Eurasian Wolf (Canis lupus lupus) is a subspecies of the Grey Wolf (Canis lupus).
These forests are home to the rare European Brown Bear, Eurasian Lynx, Eurasian wolf, European Pine Marten, Roe Deer and Capercaillie.
Remnant populations remain in Portugal, Spain, Italy, Greece and Finland, though Eurasian wolves have been recovering naturally in several parts of Europe; recolonising France, Germany, Sweden and Norway.
He further stated that even if it originally arose in Eurasian wolves, it was passed on to dogs who, soon after their arrival, brought it to the New World and then passed it to wolves and coyotes.
The Eurasian wolf, the second largest predator in Europe after the bear, can be found primarily in Eastern Europe and in the Balkans, with various packs in pockets of Western Europe (Scandinavia, Spain, etc.).
Many wild animals, such as the Eurasian wolf, fox, the golden jackal, Eurasian brown bear, wild boar, red deer, roe deer, hare, eastern hedgehog, squirrel, badger, mink and others inhabit the forested lands of the Bulgarka Park.
The Iberian wolf differs from the more common Eurasian wolf with its thinner build, the white marks on the upper lips, the dark marks on the tail and a pair of dark marks in its front legs that give it its subspecies name, signatus ("marked").
The size of Eurasian wolves is subject to geographic variation with animals in Russia and Scandinavia being larger and bulkier than those residing in Western Europe, having been compared by Theodore Roosevelt to the large wolves of north-western Montana and Washington.
Because of their longer association with urban civilisations, Eurasian wolves tend to be more adaptable than North American wolves in the face of human expansion; Southern European wolves successfully live in areas with much higher human densities than what North American wolves will tolerate.
Canis lupus lupus, for example, the one that matches the gray hair sample?
The nominate subspecies is Canis lupus lupus.
It's wolf hair-European wolf, canis lupus lupus.
Eurasian Wolf (Canis lupus lupus)
Canis lupus chanco is regarded as a synonym of Canis lupus lupus, reflecting a recent tendency to lump older subspecies and to name fewer new ones.
The Eurasian Wolf (Canis lupus lupus) is a subspecies of the Grey Wolf (Canis lupus).
A sign showed a picture of a wolf and read CANIS LUPUS LUPUS, EUROPEAN WOLF in several languages.