Tundra wolf

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Tundra wolf
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Taxidermy exhibit at the Museum of Zoology, St. Petersburg
Scientific classification
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C. l. albus
Trinomial name
Canis lupus albus
Kerr, 1792
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Tundra wolf range
Synonyms
  • dybowskii (Domaniewski, 1926)
  • kamtschaticus (Dybowski, 1922)
  • turuchanensis (Ognev, 1923)[1]

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The tundra wolf (Canis lupus albus), also known as the Turukhan wolf,[2] is a subspecies of grey wolf native to Eurasia's tundra and forest-tundra zones from Finland to the Kamchatka Peninsula.[2] It was first described in 1792 by Robert Kerr, who described it as living around the Yenisei, and of having a highly valued pelt.[3]

It is a large subspecies, with adult males measuring 118–137 cm (46–54 in) in body length, and females 112–136 cm (44–54 in). Although often written to be larger than C. l. lupus, this is untrue, as heavier members of the latter subspecies have been recorded. Average weight is 40–49 kg (88-108 lb) for males and 36.6–41 kg (81-90 lbs) for females. The highest weight recorded among 500 wolves caught in the Taymyr Peninsula and the Kanin Peninsula during 1951-1961 was from an old male killed on the Taymyr at the north of the Dudypta River weighing 52 kg (115 lb). The fur is very long, dense, fluffy and soft, and is usually light and grey in colour. The lower fur is lead-grey and the upper fur is reddish-grey.[4]

References

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  2. 2.0 2.1 Mech, L. David (1981), The Wolf: The Ecology and Behaviour of an Endangered Species, University of Minnesota Press, p. 353, ISBN 0-8166-1026-6
  3. Kerr, R. (1792), The animal kingdom, or zoological system, of the celebrated Sir Charles Linnæus: containing a complete systematic description, arrangement, and nomenclature, of all the known species and varieties of the mammalia, or animals which give suck to their young, Printed for A. Strahan, and T. Cadell, London, and W. Creech, Edinburgh, p. 137
  4. Heptner, V. G. & Naumov, N., P. (1998) Mammals of the Soviet Union Vol.II Part 1a, SIRENIA AND CARNIVORA (Sea cows; Wolves and Bears), Science Publishers, Inc., USA, pp. 182-184, ISBN 1-886106-81-9