@@tucker2074 That adult bison they attacked first will be deaf within a week. If you look carefully you'll see the wolves already started taking out its insides. The herd protecting it only delayed the inevitable
Даа и некакой защиты от стада, а то выдумывают комментаторы всякую чюшь, встают в оборону, туда сюда, ерунда, если хищники голодные не какая оборона им не почём, всё равно сожрут .
Wolves and Elk have been balancing each other out for centuries, Humans are the compounding variable here, not the wolves. They need to be managed, not eliminated. As elk populations begin to fall the remaining individuals will be stronger and more able to avoid predation when compared to times when the herd is large. Wolves already have a low success rate ~15% early winter. Wolves will die back, elk will rebound, and so it goes. Numbers just might not be where people deem them ideal
@Smokey Bear Great argument my fellow Homo sapien, you're a real pleasure to this world. You can talk all the smack you want and cry behind your glowing screen, but agasizzi is stating a renowned FACT; density-dependent population regulation. Density dependent: when a birth or death rate does change with population density. In this case, when resources (herbaceous ungulates (bison/deer)) are scarce in numbers or limited, a reduction of predator-prey encounters is seen; this overtime leads to a decline in predator populations (wolves). Agasizzi is emphasizing the carrying capacity amongst populations and how if left alone both predator-prey relations will reach a fundamental equilibrium. When we (Homo sapiens) get involved, we can alter this "equilibrium" by creating variables which restrict prey, giving predators the advantage. An example of this are railways in the Peace region of BC. Railways in the winter are being utilized by wolves to cover ground faster and take advantage over caribou which struggle on the train tracks. You can deny everything I said and thats totally fine, but these are facts and they have been studied continuously over the past couple years.
i was there this weekend and because of the snow we couldn't get through the whole park.. we got lucky and saw a moma bear with her 3 cubs but we wanted to see wolves.. do you know where their easily to see in the park?
Elk have had to deal with very tough feeding conditions in winter the last year or so, This year is looking rough as well. While the wolves do play a role in their decline, It's not the majority role in the past few years.
i no right when a wolf is hungry and it finds it's victim there is no escape and did u notice how quickly the crows ravens and magpies showed up thats just crazy on the other hand thx 4 uploading man{talking 2 the person who videotaped this not u sry}.
@TheFreecoyote i just got back from yellowstone for 2 weeks a couple days ago the reason there areant any moose is because the 88' fire destroyed their habbitats wolves rarely kill moose... and the reason you dont see any elk right now is because they move around alot, they migrate in the summer if you want to see some elk go in the winter time to the lamar valley and there are thousands and thousands of them...... there are actually more bison than any other large mamal in yellowstone.
the wolves haven't totally learned to hunt like the wolves in Wood Buffalo National Park, who routinely take down large bison. These wolves were amateurish in their tactics but eventually they got the prey they wanted.
It also should be noted that the elk herd at one point in yellowstone was so excessively large that it was decimating come of the local plant ecology. These numbers were artificially increased by removal of their primary predator the wolves. I understand you like lots of elk for hunting (Tourism with a gun) We have the same issue heere with white-tails. Too many for the ecosystem to cope with, Too few to keep hunters happy. (And I hunt)
The wolves "introduced" are actually an "invasive species". The Northern Rocky Mountain wolf native to Yellowstone and still found in parts of Canada were not transplanted but the US Fish and Wildlife Service chose to call all subspecies of wolves "canis lupis".....sort of like a dog is a dog like a poodle is the same as a pitbull.. The US paid Canada 1 million per wolf - Tundra wolves from the McKenzie Valley that are 1/3 larger and more aggressive than native wolves.
WE NEED OURSELVES WE NEED EACH OTHER THE STRENGTH TO BE ONE ANOTHER, FREEDOM, YOU ROCK WOLVES, WAITA GOOOO!!! MY FAMILY WANTS YOU WOLVES TO HAVE YOUR INNER SPRITS GLOW! IT'S TRUE YOU ARE QUITE PRUDENT.........
@@ginaedwards2808 Welll I believe any predator on earth would have a hard time taking on a guy grown 1 ton bison... ua-cam.com/video/ruEBfgAOVNo/v-deo.html Here is a video of one she wolf doing the hunt alone. It was long and hard but she still did it. Never seen a big cat of any size do that
@Thewoog True^^ But if there would be a large herd of bisons, some of them could stay "outside" and fight against them. Problem is, how to show bisons good tactics? xD
Может ты посоветуешь шакала тату набивать. Волка накалывают не за то чем он питается, а совсем по другой причине. Не пиши то о чём не рубишь. А лиса кстати жрёт мышей, крыс, птиц, падаль. Так что на лоб её себе набей.
I would disagree I think all of nature should be like Yellowstone and we should just let everything happen naturally. If wolves kill all the Bison or another animal we should just let it be. That's the world I one day want to live in.
"Let everything happen naturally." How nice. So the guy out on his surfboard being attacked by a great white or tiger shark should be left for "everything to happen naturally", yes?
Ещё один защитник дикой природы. К сведению вашему, съёмка велась с очень большого расстояния. Как вы думаете, в эту минуту, где-то в лесу лиса с зайчиком чай с булочками распивают? Или они ВЫЖИВАЮТ ?? Любой хищник в природе живёт после того как съест другого животного. Человек ест картофельные котлеты? Рыбу любите? Человек подонок? Кого вы в зеркало видите?
check out how fast the ravens show up. They are incredibly smart birds.
Really cool video! It's amazing how persistent those Wolves are.
And how tough bison are
@@tucker2074 That adult bison they attacked first will be deaf within a week.
If you look carefully you'll see the wolves already started taking out its insides. The herd protecting it only delayed the inevitable
Yep. Being last in line is never a good thing for the buff. 😞
Даа и некакой защиты от стада, а то выдумывают комментаторы всякую чюшь, встают в оборону, туда сюда, ерунда, если хищники голодные не какая оборона им не почём, всё равно сожрут .
Que belos animais bison e lobos. Admiro todos os dois.
It was exciting. 😊👍💯
I'm curious as to which pack this is, Only a few of the yellowstone packs hunt bison regularly.
Wolves and Elk have been balancing each other out for centuries, Humans are the compounding variable here, not the wolves. They need to be managed, not eliminated. As elk populations begin to fall the remaining individuals will be stronger and more able to avoid predation when compared to times when the herd is large. Wolves already have a low success rate ~15% early winter. Wolves will die back, elk will rebound, and so it goes. Numbers just might not be where people deem them ideal
@Smokey Bear Great argument my fellow Homo sapien, you're a real pleasure to this world. You can talk all the smack you want and cry behind your glowing screen, but agasizzi is stating a renowned FACT; density-dependent population regulation. Density dependent: when a birth or death rate does change with population density. In this case, when resources (herbaceous ungulates (bison/deer)) are scarce in numbers or limited, a reduction of predator-prey encounters is seen; this overtime leads to a decline in predator populations (wolves). Agasizzi is emphasizing the carrying capacity amongst populations and how if left alone both predator-prey relations will reach a fundamental equilibrium. When we (Homo sapiens) get involved, we can alter this "equilibrium" by creating variables which restrict prey, giving predators the advantage. An example of this are railways in the Peace region of BC. Railways in the winter are being utilized by wolves to cover ground faster and take advantage over caribou which struggle on the train tracks.
You can deny everything I said and thats totally fine, but these are facts and they have been studied continuously over the past couple years.
i was there this weekend and because of the snow we couldn't get through the whole park.. we got lucky and saw a moma bear with her 3 cubs but we wanted to see wolves.. do you know where their easily to see in the park?
jesus christ, they rip the bison open and he's still MOVING? tough SOB...
Even the birds want a chance to wet their beaks.
and anyway, we weren't debating tourism, we were debating the impact of wolf reintroduction on the Elk herd in Yellowstone
Lol, I've never been to LA, I live in Wisconsin and am an ECOLOGIST. So much for your research skills
that was amazing footage simply remarkable
Elk have had to deal with very tough feeding conditions in winter the last year or so, This year is looking rough as well. While the wolves do play a role in their decline, It's not the majority role in the past few years.
Wolves generally hunts small bisons because big ones can easily kill a few wolves.
i no right when a wolf is hungry and it finds it's victim there is no escape and did u notice how quickly the crows ravens and magpies showed up thats just crazy on the other hand thx 4 uploading man{talking 2 the person who videotaped this not u sry}.
@TheFreecoyote i just got back from yellowstone for 2 weeks a couple days ago the reason there areant any moose is because the 88' fire destroyed their habbitats wolves rarely kill moose... and the reason you dont see any elk right now is because they move around alot, they migrate in the summer if you want to see some elk go in the winter time to the lamar valley and there are thousands and thousands of them...... there are actually more bison than any other large mamal in yellowstone.
wolves:1 bison:0
Why bisons don´t fight back? If the bison would cick, at least one wolf would die. Or back off
the wolves haven't totally learned to hunt like the wolves in Wood Buffalo National Park, who routinely take down large bison. These wolves were amateurish in their tactics but eventually they got the prey they wanted.
very good video wonderfull this is nature men thanks for video
Хорошее видео
It also should be noted that the elk herd at one point in yellowstone was so excessively large that it was decimating come of the local plant ecology. These numbers were artificially increased by removal of their primary predator the wolves. I understand you like lots of elk for hunting (Tourism with a gun) We have the same issue heere with white-tails. Too many for the ecosystem to cope with, Too few to keep hunters happy. (And I hunt)
Волк птица умная
He said let me get back to the group u can have the small one.
Лучше не показывать исход. 😢
Супер!!!
The wolves "introduced" are actually an "invasive species". The Northern Rocky Mountain wolf native to Yellowstone and still found in parts of Canada were not
transplanted but the US Fish and Wildlife Service chose to call all subspecies of wolves "canis lupis".....sort of like a dog is a dog like a poodle is the same as a pitbull.. The US paid Canada 1 million per wolf - Tundra wolves from the McKenzie Valley that are 1/3 larger and more aggressive than native wolves.
WE NEED OURSELVES WE NEED EACH OTHER THE STRENGTH TO BE ONE ANOTHER, FREEDOM, YOU ROCK WOLVES, WAITA GOOOO!!! MY FAMILY WANTS YOU WOLVES TO HAVE YOUR INNER SPRITS GLOW! IT'S TRUE YOU ARE QUITE PRUDENT.........
Why aren't Bisons united against wolves?
That what I was wondering they don't seem to care if there buddy dies but I guess there probably panicking.
They are having a hard time taking the bison down
It just shows how some of there hunts are not successful
A successful hunt after all
@@ginaedwards2808 Welll I believe any predator on earth would have a hard time taking on a guy grown 1 ton bison...
ua-cam.com/video/ruEBfgAOVNo/v-deo.html
Here is a video of one she wolf doing the hunt alone. It was long and hard but she still did it. Never seen a big cat of any size do that
@@ginaedwards2808 in the harsh Canadian winter all they hunt is bison
WOlves need to be managed to an extent to avoid unwanted interaction with humans (pets, livestock, etc) but that's all.
@Thewoog True^^ But if there would be a large herd of bisons, some of them could stay "outside" and fight against them. Problem is, how to show bisons good tactics? xD
No offence but some people should invest in a tripod for filming.
I believe in saving life
that's gotta be a slow and painful death. nature is brutal
I once FOUGHT off a pack of 14 wolves with my bare hands and didn't break a sweat!!....WHO DA MAN?...I DA MAN!!
PEACE!!✌✌✌
From an ecological standpoint, as well as in reference specifically to yellowstone, you have no clue what you're talking about
HYMANS need to be managed and first of all for human self sake...
Russian wolves in usa
да волк берет слабых лиси тотуйровку надо рисовать на теле
Может ты посоветуешь шакала тату набивать. Волка накалывают не за то чем он питается, а совсем по другой причине. Не пиши то о чём не рубишь. А лиса кстати жрёт мышей, крыс, птиц, падаль. Так что на лоб её себе набей.
@@АлександерКремер я их всех обдирайю но лиса хвастун но берет жырных уменя щота нет по по природе а за ролик класс
I would disagree I think all of nature should be like Yellowstone and we should just let everything happen naturally. If wolves kill all the Bison or another animal we should just let it be. That's the world I one day want to live in.
"Let everything happen naturally." How nice. So the guy out on his surfboard being attacked by a great white or tiger shark should be left for "everything to happen naturally", yes?
I want see a video of a wolf getting trommped by buffalo other on elk moose etc
@FLASHoverlord yeah i noticed that
Кто ставил на Бизона став 👍
Как это можно. было снимать.?
Подонки.
Ради. Лайка. На экране.
Страшная смерть.
Экстаз словили?
А когда людей убивают,а другие снимают.
Ещё один защитник дикой природы. К сведению вашему, съёмка велась с очень большого расстояния. Как вы думаете, в эту минуту, где-то в лесу лиса с зайчиком чай с булочками распивают? Или они ВЫЖИВАЮТ ?? Любой хищник в природе живёт после того как съест другого животного. Человек ест картофельные котлеты? Рыбу любите? Человек подонок? Кого вы в зеркало видите?