Video from the Haíɫzaqv Nation Indigenous community shows a wolf hauling a crab trap ashore. Scientists are split on whether it counts as tool use.
A new study documented wild wolves using ropes to pull crab traps ashore, offering what may be the first proof of tool use by ...
This still image of a wolf at night comes from a camera trap, which was part of an experiment investigating wolf behavior in ...
Within a day of the cameras being set up in the Heiltsuk First Nation last year, researchers  captured footage of a sea wolf emerging from the water with a buoy hanging from its mouth. The footage ...
The wolf “appears to demonstrate a sophisticated understanding of the multi-step connection between the floating buoy and the ...
After a wolf dragged a crab trap out of water to get a snack, some scientists said the behavior revealed their ability to use ...
Our crews came in and said that, you know, something had been pulling our crab traps and taking the bait,' William Housty ...
The traps, set up near Bella Bella, on B.C.’s central coast, were being used to control the invasive European green crab, and ...
A female wolf learned to pull fully submerged crab traps out of the water and eat the bait inside in what could be the first ...
Video from the coast of British Columbia may be the first documented instance of a wild wolf using a tool, according to the researchers who published it on Monday.
Abandoned crab pots can be a serious issue in the Chesapeake Bay. As long as there is bait in them they will continue to catch crabs. A dead crab in an abandoned pot becomes bait. But a recent article ...