![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/closedgrin.gif)
Didja know a wolf howl doesnt echo?
![Howling :howl: :oo](./images/smilies/howl.gif)
Wolves can have a crushing pressure of about 1,500 lbs/in2 while a german sheperd has 750 lbs/in2
![Mad :x](./images/smilies/angry.gif)
With the jaws of course.Silverclaw wrote:
Wolves can have a crushing pressure of about 1,500 lbs/in2 while a german sheperd has 750 lbs/in2
You mean all the better to open beer cans with!!Aki wrote:With the jaws of course.Silverclaw wrote:
Wolves can have a crushing pressure of about 1,500 lbs/in2 while a german sheperd has 750 lbs/in2![]()
Alll the better to eats with
Wouldn't a mosquito be a weremosquito if it sucked blood from a werewolf?Scott Gardener wrote: Now, how about the guy who got lycanthropy from a mosquito bite, or from a dentist who was a werewolf?
Actually, wolves don't have a more highly evolved brain, it's that humans have provided dogs an environment that is nowhere near as demanding as the environments wolves live in. Plus, over the course of the 12 to 15 thousand years of domesticating the dog, we humans have tended to select "puppy-like" traits, both physical and psychological. The main trait being that, adult wolves tend to be very suspicious of new-comers, wolf, or human,, and rarely, if ever, accept new-comers, while dogs can be conditioned to accept new-comers, animal or human.JonathanBaine wrote: The only difference in wolves and dogs is that the wolves have a higher evolved brain.
I remember that story...WolvenOne wrote:Actually there's a story entitled "Never Moon a Werewolf," but the werewolves in it don't actually change when people moon-them or anything. Infact if I remember the story right they're some of the more civilized Werewolves I've seen in movies/books.
Actually any of the wolves can mate, just its' dicouraged if the pack is large enough or if there is a shorttage of food. etc.Apokryltaros wrote:Only the alpha pair mate, usually for life, though sometimes they select other packmembers as mates.IblisPendragon wrote:don't wolves choose on mate for life?
I thought that the red wolves (those alive today, at least) have a lot of coyote and or domestic dog in them.Reilune wrote:Alot of times when the alpha wolves don't mate with eachother it's because they're siblings or are related somehow.
Wolves will also mate with dogs and coyotes. Speculation is that red wolves are a mix between gray wolf and coyote, since they look more like grays in the northern part of their range and coyotes in the south.