The Ellesmere wolves Behavior and ecology in the high Arctic

L. David Mech

Book - 2025

"In a fascinating story of discovery and science, we meet a remote population of wolves unafraid of humans. For parts of twenty-four summers, wolf biologist L. David Mech lived with a group of wolves on Ellesmere Island, some six hundred miles from the North Pole. Elsewhere, most wolves flee from even the scent of humans, but these animals, evolving relatively free from human persecution, are unafraid. Having already spent twenty-eight years studying other populations of wolves more remotely by aircraft, snow-tracking, live-trapping, and radio-tracking, Mech was primed to join their activities up close and record their interactions with each other. This book tells the remarkable story of what Mech-and the researchers who followed him-h...ave learned while living among the wolves. The Ellesmere wolves were so unconcerned with Mech's presence that they allowed him to camp near their den and to sit on his all-terrain vehicle as he observed them, watching packs as large as seven adults and six pups go about their normal activities. In these extraordinarily close quarters, a pup untying his bootlace or an adult sniffing his gloved hand was just part of daily life. Mech accompanied the wolves on their travels and watched as they hunted muskoxen and arctic hares. By achieving the same kind of intimacy with his wild hosts' every action that we might experience living with domesticated dogs, Mech gained new insights into common but rarely studied behaviors like pup feeding, food caching, howling, and scent-marking. After Mech's time at Ellesmere ended, his coauthors and fellow wolf researchers Morgan Anderson and H. Dean Cluff spent parts of four summers studying the wolves via radio collars, further illuminating the creatures' movements and ecology. This book synthesizes their findings, offering both a compelling scientific overview of the animals' behavior-from hunting to living in packs to rearing pups-and a tale of adventure and survival in the Arctic"--

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Published
Chicago : The University of Chicago Press 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
L. David Mech (author)
Other Authors
Morgan Anderson (author), H. Dean (Howard Dean) Cluff, 1961-
Physical Description
pages cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780226833729
9780226833743
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

As the introduction to this remarkable book points out, the scientific literature on wolves is enormous, and there are scores of popular titles covering Canis lupus. What sets this book apart are two things: one, the primary author--with more than 60 years of scientific investigation, L. David Mech (author of the seminal The Wolf) is probably the most knowledgeable wolf researcher on the planet--and two, the Ellesmere wolves themselves. Ellesmere is a high Arctic island, and since the white wolves living there have never been persecuted by humans, they allow close approach. This enables the observation of the intimate details of their behavior and interactions in a way that is not possible with other wolves. Following nearly 40 years of research, living alongside the wolves and watching the pack interactions, pup rearing, and hunting was a whole new experience for a scientist more used to watching wolves from a plane. In intimate prose, often revealing the author's excitement, Mech discusses the wolf research he and his coauthors conducted each summer. Illustrated with photographs, maps, and figures, this close-up look at the daily lives of wolves is a wonderful addition to the wolf canon.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The pack, up close. Ellesmere Island, the second-closest landmass to the North Pole, is home to some of the world's most intriguing species. The wild, snow-white Arctic wolves residing there have captivated renowned wolf researcher L. David Mech for 25 years, and they sustain the reader's attention as well. Generally speaking, wolves are difficult for researchers to study up close, largely due to their well-deserved fear of humans who have hunted them for centuries. Mech himself had mostly observed wolves from helicopters prior to his time on Ellesmere, stating, "I increasingly realized how truly unique this opportunity was for learning about wolves in a way that my previous decades of study had never come close to….I was now gaining the kind of personal knowledge of these wild creatures that one absorbs about their pets by simply living with them." What makes the wolves on Ellesmere so special is their unfamiliarity with and lack of fear of humans, which allows for intimate, up-close interactions. Mech's account follows his decades of study, as he observes the wolves through summer after summer, witnessing changes in their environment and behavior. His groundbreaking work paved the way for other researchers and documentarians, as he became a steward to these wolves and their trusting nature. The book is sprinkled with delightful photos of pups, yearlings, and adult wolves, along with anecdotes and heartwarming moments that make it a joy to read. Deeply moving and richly described, the book makes it clear that one does not need to be a scientist to find these wolves fascinating. A mesmerizing account of wolves and the researcher who devoted his life to understanding their world. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.