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      • The wolf is built for travel. Its long legs, large feet, and deep but narrow chest suit it well for life on the move. Keen senses, large canine teeth, powerful jaws, and the ability to pursue prey at 60 km (37 miles) per hour equip the wolf well for a predatory way of life.
      www.britannica.com/animal/wolf
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  2. Wolves are a critical keystone species in a healthy ecosystem. A keystone species is often, but not always, a predator – like the wolf. Outnumbered greatly by their prey, predators can control the distribution, population, and behavior of large numbers of prey species.

    • What Does Feeding The Good Wolf Mean?
    • Feeding The Good Wolf: A Global Example
    • Deep Brain Issues
    • Learning from Neuroscience

    The concept of “feeding the good wolf” comes from a story attributed to Indigenous peoples of North America. The story conceives of two wolves that live inside each of us – a good wolf and a bad wolf. The good wolf is kind and compassionate. The bad wolf is warlike and destructive. Throughout our lives these two wolves are always at war. The wolf t...

    In 1948 the U.S. Government initiated The Marshall Plan, a program to provide aid to Western European countries, whose economies and infrastructures had been devastated during World War II. Ultimately, aid from the U.S. was distributed to 16 European countries to help them rebuild their economies and stabilize their governments. U.S. leaders were w...

    What stands in our way from choosing to heal, repair, and help ourselves while also helping others? About 200,000 years of history, during which our brains have been primedto divide the world into “them” and “us,”and to focus on protecting and nurturing “us” while vanquishing, neutralizing, and destroying the threat of “them.” There are very few of...

    Our mission at Good Wolf is to use neuroscience to help us, individually and as a society, make a “brain pivot” from a “them vs. us” mentality to an “all for one and one for all” approach. A key part of this process is feeding the good wolf, individually and collectively. We know that the brain stays plastic – i.e. capable of change – throughout ou...

  3. With humans as a wolf’s greatest threat, does this apex predator allow itself to be easily preyed upon? What is its primary habitat, mating behavior, and reproduction process? Let’s learn more about this animal, which Mongolians consider a good luck symbol, particularly for men. Scientific Classification Gray Wolf

    • Mammalia
    • Carnivora
    • Animalia
    • Chordata
    • What makes a wolf a good Wolf?1
    • What makes a wolf a good Wolf?2
    • What makes a wolf a good Wolf?3
    • What makes a wolf a good Wolf?4
    • What makes a wolf a good Wolf?5
  4. Apr 1, 2020 · Once we become aware of the two wolves, we gain the power to stop feeding the bad wolf and start putting that time and energy towards the good wolf, so that it can thrive. That doesn’t mean that we will ever completely rid ourselves of fear, worry, or doubt.

    • Wolves Are Surprisingly Diverse. The word “wolf” usually refers to the gray wolf (Canis lupus), the most widespread and familiar wolf species still in existence.
    • There Used to Be a Lot More Wolves. Even with this diversity, and the relative abundance of gray wolves globally, Earth now has far fewer wolves—and fewer kinds—than it once did.
    • Dire Wolves May Not Have Been Wolves. The now-extinct dire wolf was common across North America until about 13,000 years ago when much of the continent’s megafauna vanished amid natural climate changes.
    • Alpha Wolves’ Are Just Moms and Dads. Gray wolves usually live in packs of six to 10 individuals, led by a dominant breeding pair. You may have heard someone refer to these pack leaders as "alpha wolves," or males and females who supposedly gain dominance by fighting within their packs, eventually becoming the group's leaders and exclusive breeders.
  5. 3 days ago · Wolf, any of two species of wild doglike carnivores. The gray, or timber, wolf (Canis lupus), which inhabits vast areas of the Northern Hemisphere, is the better known. The Ethiopian, or Abyssinian, wolf (C. simensis) inhabits the highlands of Ethiopia; until recently it was considered a jackal.

  6. Find out more about the scientific classification of wolves, and discover the different types of wolves found in the world and what makes them different. Link to: Wolf FAQ’s.