Praise for The Rise of Wolf 8
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[McIntyre] spins the best stories about wolves that anyone will ever tell, ever.
DOUGLAS W. SMITH, senior wildlife biologist and project leader for the Yellowstone Gray Wolf Restoration Project
Rick McIntyres book, The Rise of Wolf 8, has no match in literature. He presents the personal lives of wild wolves in a riveting narrative without equal for its detail and insight. This work took decades of devotion and consumed most of his life. We are so fortunate that we can, through this book, share the ride.
ROLF PETERSON, Michigan Technological University, author of The Wolves of Isle Royale: A Broken Balance
Rick McIntyre knows more about Yellowstones wolves than anyone living or dead. This book is a must-read and a treasure for anyone who loves the places where wolves howl.
THOMAS D. MANGELSEN, nature photographer and conservationist
To follow the ever-changing destinies of the Yellowstone wolves is to witness a real-life drama, complete with acts of bravery, tragedy, sacrifice, and heroism.
JIM AND JAMIE DUTCHER, founders of Living with Wolves
The stories of the different pack members are reminiscent of Ernest Thompson Setons animal characters, but these wolves were and are from real life, and what they reveal will become a classic study in animal behavior.
BERND HEINRICH, professor emeritus of biology at the University of Vermont and author of Mind of the Raven
Rick McIntyre is a fabulous researcher. He dedicated his life to documenting the histories of generations of wolves in Yellowstone. I envy the hours he has spent in the field talking to people about wolves and tracking the wolves movements in the most beautiful country in the world.
SCOTT FRAZIER, director of Project Indigenous, Crow/Santee
Yellowstones resident wolf guru Rick McIntyre has been many things to many people: an expert tracker for the parks biologists, an indefatigable roadside interpreter for visitors, and an invaluable consultant to countless chronicles of the parks wolvesincluding my own. But he is first and foremost a storyteller whose encyclopedic knowledge of Yellowstones wolf reintroduction projectnow in its 25th yearis unparalleled.
NATE BLAKESLEE, author of American Wolf
This book clearly demonstrates that these apex predators are an essential ingredient for maintaining the integrity of the diverse ecosystems in which they live. The Rise of Wolf 8 is a must-readone to which I will return many timesfor anyone interested in wolves and the natural world. Wolves (and humans) are lucky to have Rick McIntyre.
MARC BEKOFF, PhD, University of Colorado (Boulder), author of Rewilding Our Hearts: Building Pathways of Compassion and Coexistence and Canine Confidential: Why Dogs Do What They Do.
Rick McIntyre knows and understands the wolves in much the same way that a traditional Native would. He knows their birthdates and birthplaces, their family and their family history, their personalities, preferences, strengths and weaknesses, their character or lack thereof. In other words, he knows them as individualsand not just as subjects for scientific study. He KNOWS them.
JOHN POTTER, wildlife artist, Anishinabe
This books contribution to wolf biology is immense, for scientists as well as for wolf lovers.
LUIGI BOITANI, honorary professor, Department of Biology and Biotechnology, University of Rome
No one I know of has watched wild wolves longer or more closely than Rick McIntyre.
ED BANGS, former US Fish and Wildlife Service wolf recovery coordinator for the Northern Rockies
RICK MCINTYRE
Foreword by ROBERT REDFORD
There is no fundamental difference between man and the higher mammals in their mental faculties.... Animals, like man, manifestly feel pleasure and pain, happiness and misery. Happiness is never better exhibited than by young animals, such as puppies... when playing together, like our own children.
CHARLES DARWIN, THE DESCENT OF MAN (1871)
[Your studies of] chimpanzees made us see them as individuals and have empathy for them.
STEPHEN COLBERT TO JANE GOODALL (2014)
CONTENTS
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by Robert Redford
by Douglas W. Smith
PRINCIPAL WOLVES
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THESE FAMILY TREES cover the numbered wolves in the packs that feature most prominently in this book: Crystal Creek, Rose Creek, and Druid Peak. Numbers in triangles indicate male wolves and numbers in circles indicate female wolves.
Crystal Creek Pack
The alpha pair, alpha male 4 and alpha female 5, arrived in Yellowstone in January 1994, along with their four male pups. The family was from Alberta.
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Rose Creek Pack
A mother and daughter, 9 and 7, arrived in Yellowstone in January 1995, and were introduced to lone male wolf 10. The three wolves were all from Alberta. 9 and 10 formed a pair bond, and 7 dispersed to become the alpha female of the first new pack to be formed in Yellowstone: the Leopold pack. Wolf 2 from the Crystal Creek pack joined her to become the Leopold packs first alpha male.
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In addition to the five pups identified by number in the family tree above, the litter of 1995 included three more male pups.
Druid Peak Pack
A mother, 39, and her three daughters, 40, 41, and 42, arrived in Yellowstone in January 1996 and were introduced to lone male wolf 38. All five wolves were from British Columbia. Later that year, the five Druids were joined by a young male, wolf 31, who is thought to have come from the same pack in British Columbia as their alpha male, 38. Although 38 and 39 were the alpha pair, they did not produce any pups together. Wolf 38 did produce pups with two of 39s daughters, 41 and 42.
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Wolf 163 was born into this pack in 1998. His mother was likely 40. To find out who his father was, you will need to read on.
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FOREWORD
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