| The wolf is the ancestor of all  breeds   of domestic dog. It is part of a group of animals called the  wild dogs   which also includes the dingo and the coyote.
 Most wolves weigh about 40 kilograms   but the  heaviest wolf ever recorded weighed over 80 kilograms!
 Adult wolves have large feet. A fully   grown  wolf would have a paw print nearly 13 centimetres long and 10    centimetres wide.  
 Wolves live and hunt in groups  called   a pack. A pack can range from two wolves to as many as 20  wolves depending on such factors as habitat and food supply. Most    packs have one breeding pair of wolves, called the alpha pair, who lead  the hunt.
 Wolf pups are born deaf and blind  while weighing  around 0.5 kg (1 lb). It takes about 8 months before  they are old enough  to actively join in wolf pack hunts.
 Wolves in the Arctic have to travel  much   longer distances than wolves in the forest to find food and will  sometimes   go for several days without eating.
 When hunting alone, the wolf  catches   small animals such as squirrels, hares, chipmunks, raccoons or  rabbits.   However, a pack of wolves can hunt very large animals like  moose, caribou   and yaks.
 When the pack kills an animal, the  alpha   pair always eats first. As food supply is often irregular for  wolves,   they will eat up to 1/5th of their own body weight at a time    to make up for days of missed food.
 Wolves have two layers of fur, an  undercoat   and a top coat, which allow them to survive in temperatures  as low at   minus 40 degrees Celsius! In warmer weather they flatten  their fur to   keep cool.
 A wolf can run at a speed of 65  kilometres   per hour during a chase. Wolves have long legs and spend  most of their   time trotting at a speed of 12-16 kilometres per hour.  They can keep   up a reasonable pace for hours and have been known to  cover distances   of 90 kilometres in one night.
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