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AI Is Paying Attention to the Howls of Yellowstone Wolves — and It Is Helping in a Big Way
Yellowstone National Park could be swarming with wolves again, all thanks to artificial intelligence. It seems that the researchers have hit the bullseye with their new approach to conservation or ...
Deep in the heart of Yellowstone National Park, audio recorders roughly the size of hardcover books are documenting wolf barks, elk bugles and bird chirps 24 hours of the day, seven days a week, 365 ...
Life’s misfortunes are often written on a body’s bones. The fall from a wall that cracked a construction worker’s skull. That whitewater canoe trip when your friend’s finger was smashed between the ...
Howling is a way for wolves to communicate, but it’s also a way for them to be killed by other predators, including humans. While a wolf is alone, such as young males that disperse to start a new pack ...
Editor’s note: This is the third installment of Howl, a five-part written series and podcast season produced in partnership between the Idaho Capital Sun, States Newsroom and Boise State Public Radio.
Few animals symbolize wild interconnectedness quite like wolves, whose return helped reveal just how tightly ecosystems are woven together.
For wolves in Yellowstone, it’s all about survival. Pack members sometimes put the smackdown on each other, just to maintain ...
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