When wolves stay in Yellowstone National Park. Like the Yellowstone National Park in the United States, the National Park holds rich cultural resources and natural resources of the country, so it is the cornerstone of all countries. Yellowstone National Park is the world's first national park with more than 1,000 flora and fauna (Yellowstone Media) combined with Rhode Island State and Delaware State, where millions of tourist attractions gather every year. However, the Yellowstone National Park has long been devoid of very important species.
Twenty years ago, an ecological experiment began in Yellowstone National Park. The wolf killed and killed in the park was reintroduced. In January 1995, eight gray wolves from Jasper National Park in Alberta got off at the Yellowstone Park. From there, the population will prosper - in 2014, there were 11 packs in the park with only 100 people. Just after the Hayden Geological Survey at the Yellowstone Park in 1871, the hunting of the Yellowstone wolf began. In the following 50 years the population has drastically decreased and in the 1970s scientific investigations did not show evidence of wolves in the Yellowstone. As there are no major predators, the number of elk populations exploded in the national park and the vegetation was damaged by overgrazing. Experts are beginning to recognize the important role the wolves play in the park, and biologists are beginning to consider ways to reintroduce seeds
The wolf of Yellowstone has a long history. By the end of the 1920's almost all American wolves were killed mainly by ranchers protecting their livestock. Yellowstone National Park started reintroducing wolves in 1995 as the population drastically decreased. That is one of the few wolves in America. As of December 2014, the park had 11 wolves and 104 wolves. Wolves are protected outside the park outside the park, but the law to manage wolf management differs from state to state. Food supply within the park also caused wolves' population fluctuations. The wolf's lifespan is 7 - 8 years.