![]() The wolf’s jaw is its most powerful weapon. They also travel long distances to look for food. They also can jump very high and can run very fast. Wolves have the prefect fur for the cold snowy Montana winters, and long legs for jumping over the snow and huge paws with webbing between their feet that act like snowshoes so when they run they can stay on to top of the snow making hunting large animals easy. Wolves are great hunters, especially in cold snowy winters. The nature of these wolves are still showing signs of pathos because no one wants the animals to get hurt. When the Park Rangers wanted the wolves to be safe, they transferred them into Yellowstone, so they wouldn’t get hurt. A little bit of Logos and Pathos in this paragraph. This is how one pair of wild grey wolves would begin the process of naturally changing Yellowstone’s ecosystem for the better. The Park Rangers wanted to protect the pups, so they collected Wolf #9 and her pups and returned them deep inside Yellowstone. Wolves are natural wanderers and Wolf #10 crossed outside of Yellowstone boundaries and wolf #9 was found close to wolf #10 and she had little baby pups. Soon after their release #10 was murdered by a hunter outside yellowstone boundaries. These wolves’ names were a female named Wolf #9 and a male named Wolf #10. Wants us to feel that emotion to feel bad and try and help the wolves. Showing Pathos because of the two grey wolves that are being trapped. ![]() This paragraph is showing mostly Pathos because settlers were trying to kill the wolves and the film is saying sadly they were hunted to almost extinction.Īccording to the documentary, in 1995, park rangers trapped two beautiful grey wolves in Canada and brought them down to Yellowstone, tracked them and released them into the wild. Sadly, not everyone is happy about the return of wild wolves to Yellowstone National Park. The return of wolves has strengths like it has helped other species inside the park and it has helped to rebuild he parks rivers and its plants. In 1995 the National Park Service in Yellowstone began to return the grey wolf back to its natural habitat. Sadly, in 1926, the last wolf in Yellowstone National Park was killed. Grey wolves in the United States were hunted almost to extinction. Settlers were afraid of the wolves, and ranchers wanted to kill the wolves to save their livestock. Trappers, ranchers, and settlers hunted them to near extinction in the United States.US. It is estimated, by the wildlife documentary, ‘National Geographic Expedition Wild: Inside the Wolf Pack,’ retrieved from YouTube, 200,000 grey wolves once freely and wildly roamed what is the United States.
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