Voyageurs Wolf Project is first to put a video camera collar on a wild wolf. 7:01 pm, Apr. 14, 2021 ×
A wolf chews on a leg bone from a deer in this image captured from video footage from a collar-cam. (Courtesy of Voyageurs Wolf Project)
INTERNATIONAL FALLS, Minn. The researchers at the Voyageurs Wolf Project have hit another home run for folks who like learning about wolves, this time retrieving the first known video from a collar camera placed on a live wild wolf.
Lone wolf No. V089, not a member of any pack, was trapped last spring near the Ash River and fitted with a GPS collar, as are dozens of wolves being studied by researchers.
Voyageurs wolf gets his own collar-cam and its a sight to see
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Voyageurs wolf gets his own collar-cam and its a sight to see
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Voyageurs Wolf Project is first to put a video camera collar on a wild wolf. 8:34 am, Apr. 14, 2021 ×
A wolf chews on a leg bone from a deer in this image captured from video footage from a collar-cam. (Courtesy of Voyageurs Wolf Project)
The researchers at the Voyageurs Wolf Project have hit another home run for folks who like learning about wolves, this time retrieving the first known video from a collar camera placed on a live wild wolf.
Lone wolf No. V089, not a member of any pack, was trapped last spring near the Ash River and fitted with a GPS collar, as are dozens of wolves being studied by researchers.
Nearly 30 invasive carp pulled from Mississippi River in herding operation Minnesota and federal agencies herd the fish with nets and sound. April 9, 2021 7:17pm Text size Copy shortlink:
About 30 more invasive carp were pulled out of the Mississippi River this week, suggesting that the destructive fish may have established a foothold in Minnesota.
The silver and grass carp were caught in shallow backwaters of the river s Pool 8, near La Crosse, Wis., just above the southernmost lock and dam in Minnesota.
More than 50 of the carp were caught in the same pool last spring, and another 14 were caught earlier this year.
Despite the high numbers, however, it s still unknown if enough invasive carp are above the dam to successfully breed or establish permanent populations in the state, said Ben Larson, invasive carp field lead for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR).