|
NORTH AMERICAN GRAY WOLVES
|
| Picture | Common Names | Scientific Name | Quick Wolf Facts |
 | Kenai Peninsula Wolf | Canis lupus alces | One of the largest of North American wolves, reported extinct in 1925 |
 | British Columbian Wolf | Canis lupus columbianus | A large wolf found in the Yukon, British Columbia, and Alberta. |
No Picture Available | Manitoba Wolf Gray-White Wolf Elusive Wolf Saskatchewan timber wolf Grizzly Wolf | Canis lupus griseoalbus | A large wolf whose territory is northern Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Northwest Territories, and Newfoundland. Named by Baird in 1858, there is controversy over whether or not this is actually a separate sub-species. |
No Picture Available | Mackenzie Tundra Wolf | Canis lupus makenzii | The Northwest Territories wolf, not recognized as a subspecies until 1943. |
 | Mackenzie Valley Wolf Rocky Mountain Wolf | Canis lupus occidentalis | Large wolf from Alaska and the northern Rocky Mountains of Canada and the United States.
|
No Picture Available | Interior Alaskan Wolf | Canis lupus pambasileus | A dark colored wolf from Alaska and the Yukon. |
 | Alaska Tundra Wolf | Canis lupus tundrarum | The arctic tundra wolf; light in color. |
No Picture Available | Newfoundland Wolf | Canis lupus beothucus | Reported as almost pure white, now extinct.
|
No Picture Available | Vancouver Island Wolf | Canis lupus crassodon | A medium-size, grayish wold found on Vancouver Island.
|
 | Cascade Mountains Wolf | Canis lupus fuscus | A brownish-colored wolf from the Cascade Mountians; extinct by 1940.
|
No Picture Available | Hudson Bay Wolf | Canis lupus hudsonicus | A light-colored wolf found in northern Manitoba and the Northwest Territories. |
 | Northern Rocky Mountain Wolf | Canis lupus irremotus | A medium-sized, light-colored wolf from the Rocky Mountians |
No Picture Available | Labrador Wolf | Canis lupus labradorius | The wolf of Labrador and northern Quebec. |
 | Alexander Archipelago Wolf | Canis lupus ligoni | A small, dark-colored wolf from the Alexander Archipelago in the arctic islands. |
 | Eastern Wolf Eastern Timber Wolf Algonquin Wolf
C. l. lycaon inhabits the eastern portions of the US and southeastern parts of Canada. | Canis lupus lycaon
Before the classification was revised in 1995, it was thought that this was the subspecies that inhabited Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin. | Scientists now think that C. l. nubilus inhabits these areas, and Canis lupus lycaon lives in SE Canada. Lycaon was the first subspecies to be recognized in North America (1775).
|
No Picture Available | Baffin Island Tundra Wolf | Canis lupus manningi | The smallest arctic wolf, found on Baffin Island. It's either white or light-colored. Was recognized as a subspecies in 1943. |
 | Great Plains Wolf Buffalo Wolf | Canis lupus nubilus | It was previously thought to be extinct by 1926, but studies indicate that the wolves in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Upper Michigan are Canis lupus nubilus. It's usually light in color. Loafer |
No Picture Available | Southern Rocky Mountain Wolf | Canis lupus youngi | The Southern Rocky Mountian wolf was a light buff color. It has been extinct since 1935. |
 | Melville Island Wolf Arctic Wolf Artic Wolf (misspelling) White Wolf | Canis lupus arctos | White wolf of the high arctic, (above 67° north latitude)found from Melville Island to Ellesmere Island. The predominant color phase of this subspecies is a creamy white.
|
No Picture Available | Banks Island Tundra Wolf | Canis lupus bernardi | Limited to Banks and Victoria Islands in the arctic, described as white and black-tiped hair along the spinal ridge; not recognized as a subspecies until 1943; extinct sometime between 1918 and 1952.
|
No Picture Available | Greenland Wolf | Canis lupus orion | A white or very light-colored wolf from Greenland. |
 | Mexican Wolf Lobo More Information | Canis lupus baileyi (Most endangered
wolf subspecies) | Smallest north american gray wolf. Range originally extended from northern Mexico into the mountainous parts of Arizona, New Mexico & Texas. Many authorities consider it indistinguishable from canis lupus mogollonensis and canis lupus monstrabilis. |
No Picture Available | Mogollon Mountain Wolf | Canis lupus mogollonensis | A medium-sized wolf that was found in Arizona and New Mexico - extinct by 1935. |
No Picture Available | Texas Gray Wolf | Canis lupus monstrabilis | A wolf that used to be found in Texas and New Mexico - extinct by 1942. |
|
EURASIAN GRAY WOLVES
|
 | White Tundra Wolf Russian Tundra Wolf Eurasian Tundra Wolf | Canis lupus albus | Large wolf from Northern Russia. Most tundra wolves have a gray color, with mixes of black, rust and silver gray. Although they were eliminated from some of the Arctic islands north of Siberia, they have been recently seen on Wrangle Island. |
 | Arabian Wolf | Canis lupus arabs | Often considered to be the same subspecies as the Indian wolf (C.l. pallipes). This wolf lives in Israel and Egypt, in some of the most arid habitat in the world.
|
No Picture Available | Steppe Wolf | Canis lupus campestris | Some Facts |
No Picture Available | Mongolian Wolf | Canis lupus chanco Canis lupus laniger | Some Facts |
No Picture Available | Russian Wolf | Canis lupus communis | One of the largest wolves, inhabits Central Russia. |
No Picture Available | Caspian Sea Wolf | Canis lupus cubanensis | Inhabits the lands between the Caspian and Black seas.
|
No Picture Available | Spanish Wolf | Canis lupus deitanus | Some Facts |
No Picture Available | Asian Desert Wolf | Canis lupus desertorum Canis lupus palies | Some Facts |
No Picture Available | Hokkaido Japanese Wolf | Canis lupus hattai Canis lupus rex | Some Facts |
No Picture Available | Hondo Japanese Wolf | Canis lupus hodophilax | Some Facts |
No Picture Available | Italian Wolf | Canis lupus italicus | Inhabits the Italian Peninsula, and was the subject of Nowak and Fedroff's systematic study in 2002.
|
No Picture Available | Tibetan Wolf | Canis lupus laniger Canis lupus chanco | Some Facts |
No Picture Available | Common Wolf Eurasian Wolf | Canis lupus lupus | Inhabits Europe and portions of Asia. Nowak's studies have combined 3 subspecies (C.l. desertorum, C.l. campestris, C.l. chanco) with C.l. lupus, increasing the size of its range
|
No Picture Available | Egyptian Wolf Libya Wolf | Canis lupus lupaster | Thought by some to inhabit Egypt and Libya. |
No Picture Available | Austro-Hungarian Wolf | Canis lupus minor | Some Facts |
 | Indian Wolf, Iranian Wolf, Asiatic Wolf, Middle Eastern Wolf | Canis lupus pallipes | Found in the Mideast and SW Asia. The Indian wolf is one of the smallest subspecies of wolves, although they can be larger in the subspecies' northern range.
|
| Iberian Wolf | Canis lupus signatus | Some Facts |
|
NORTH AMERICAN RED WOLVES
|
 | Red Wolf
Scientists are in disagreement over the origins of the red wolf. | Canis Rufus Rufus
Some insist it is a genetically distinct species; some assert that it is a subspecies of gray wolf; others theorize that it is a hybrid of gray wolves and coyotes. | A reclusive animal that weighs between 40 and 80 pounds, the red wolf is generally a night hunter and travels in groups of two or three... More Red Wolf Facts |
No Picture Available | Swamp Wolf, Mississippi Valley Red Wolf | Canis Rufus Gregoryi | Once inhabited southwestern Indiana, southern Missouri, and eastern Oklahoma to southern Mississippi, central Louisiana, and the Big Thicket area of Texas. Now believed extinct in the wild, but may be represented in captivity or the reintroduced population in North Carolina.
|
No Picture Available | Florida Red Wolf | Canis rufus floridianus | Inhabited areas of Maine and Ohio to Florida and Alabama, now extinct. |
|
ETHIOPIAN WOLVES |
 | Ethiopian Wolf | Canis simensis simensis | Some Facts |
 | Ethiopian Wolf | Canis simensis citernii | Some Facts |
|
DIRE WOLF |
No Picture Available | Dire Wolf | Canis dirus | Believed to be a decedent of Canis lupus which migrated to North America about 750,000 years ago. Larger and heavier than C. lupus, the two species seem to have coexisted for about 400,000 years. The Dire Wolf became extinct about 7,000 years ago.
|