but it is in fact a highly accurate map,
of the comings and goings of six wolf packs, I had heard in the past that wolfpacks kept to well defined territories, and here is a visual guide showing that indeed they do,
the Voyageurs Wolf Project is a collaboration between the University of Minnesota and Voyageurs National Park which tracks and studies wolves throughout the warmer months, in 2018, the project studied six northern Minnesota packs, creating a map that showcases the intensely territorial way the animals behave, and how tightly they stick to their packs, the brightly colored line drawings were composed from 68,000 GPS locations of the six packs,
not only does the information help researchers track where
wolves have been, but also which prey the wolves have killed, “This detailed
GPS-data is incredibly valuable for understanding pack boundaries and also for
our predation research,” explains a post from the Voyageurs Wolf Project, “We
visited every spot these wolves spent more than 20 minutes to determine if the
wolves made a kill. This required an estimated 5,000 miles of hiking this past
summer from our field crew!!” after the original map circulated widely, the team decided to
bring the information to life, which you can observe in the GIF above, the
moving image includes data from April 15, 2018 to the end of October of the
same year, with GPS locations taken every 20 minutes, You can follow more data collected
by the Minnesota-based team on Facebook, the amazing thing is that there is negligible crossover
between the data-driven formations, I imagine that scent marking makes sure
they do not cross over into other packs territories.
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