Abstract

Information about wolf (Canis lupus) movements anywhere near the northern extreme of the species' range in the High Arctic (>75°N latitude) are lacking. There, wolves prey primarily on muskoxen (Ovibos moschatus) and must survive 4 months of 24 hr/day winter darkness and temperatures reaching −53 C. The extent to which wolves remain active and prey on muskoxen during the dark period are unknown, for the closest area where information is available about winter wolf movements is >2,250 km south. We studied a pack of ≥20 wolves on Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, Canada (80°N latitude) from July 2009 through mid-April 2010 by collaring a lead wolf with a Global Positioning System (GPS)/Argos radio collar. The collar recorded the wolf's precise locations at 6:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. daily and transmitted the locations by satellite to our email. Straight-line distances between consecutive 12-hr locations varied between 0 and 76 km. Mean (SE) linear distance between consecutive locations (n = 554) was 11 (0.5) km. Total minimum distance traveled was 5,979 km, and total area covered was 6,640 km2, the largest wolf range reported. The wolf and presumably his pack once made a 263-km (straight-line distance) foray to the southeast during 19–28 January 2010, returning 29 January to 1 February at an average of 41 km/day straight-line distances between 12-hr locations. This study produced the first detailed movement information about any large mammal in the High Arctic, and the average movements during the dark period did not differ from those afterwards. Wolf movements during the dark period in the highest latitudes match those of the other seasons and generally those of wolves in lower latitudes, and, at least with the gross movements measurable by our methods, the 4-month period without direct sunlight produced little change in movements.

Highlights

  • Animal movements, daily, seasonal, and annual, reveal a great deal of information about a species and its natural history [1], and considerable progress has been made studying such movements

  • Information about wolf movements near the northern extreme of the species’ range in the High Arctic (.75uN latitude) are lacking, and that area is of interest to study because that is the only region at which wolf movements during winter must take place during 4 months of 24 hr/day darkness and in temperatures as low as 253 C [3]

  • Our study pack of $20 wolves covered an area of 6,640 km2 over a period of 8.5 months, several times larger than that of any other known wolf pack [21], except possibly that reported for what appeared to be an itinerant pack in Alaska [22]

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Summary

Introduction

Seasonal, and annual, reveal a great deal of information about a species and its natural history [1], and considerable progress has been made studying such movements. In some areas at that latitude, wolves prey primarily on muskoxen (Ovibos moschatus) [5,6,7], and no information is available about wolf movements where the wolf’s main prey is muskoxen. This type of information is of intrinsic interest [1] and as a baseline for gauging the results of climate change, for conditions are changing most rapidly in the Arctic [8]

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