Amaruq

There have been wolves at the door. Two of them. Well, not exactly at the door, but right beside the house. Yesterday morning, Leah’s brother Johnny came in to work…

There have been wolves at the door. Two of them. Well, not exactly at the door, but right beside the house. Yesterday morning, Leah’s brother Johnny came in to work and told me that there was a wolf’s (Canis lupus arctos) tracks beside the house, right under the window of Travis’ room.  Both he and Danny had had a look and were pretty sure they weren’t dog prints. They had another fellow have a look at them in the afternoon light and he announced that the prints were wolf, and not only that that there were two of them, a larger and a smaller one.  It looks as though they had given chase to our resident Arctic Hare (Lepus arcticus), who lives under the house.

Usually no self respecting wolf comes near town. They are normally found shadowing the caribou. Since moving here I’ve seen one wolf crossing the road between first and second bridge (about 10 kms from town) and have heard of tracks by Uluksan and Holy Cross point, which mark the mouth of Arctic Bay. But I guess that the caribou are a little closer this year, there are some a little ways across Adam Sound apparently, so it would make sense that wolves would be closer to town also.

Arctic wolves are a subspecies of the Wolf with a shorter muzzle, smaller ears and shorter legs (probably an adaptation to the cold). Arctic wolves have a reputation of being unafraid of humans and there are famous cases of biologists (David Mech and Farley Mowat to name two) living among them while studying them. Those seem to be cases from fairly remote areas, and here where they are hunted they will flee from snowmobiles and people.

It has always been touted that wolves are no threat to people and that there has never been a document case of wolves killing a person in North America, however that changed this year. The wolf attack, near Wolloston Lake in Northern Saskatchewan (I was almost transferred there once), appears to have been from a small pack of four wolves who became habituated to people and garbage. Wildlife and garbage has never been a good combination and as is usually the case wolves are under more threat from us than vice versa.

The population of wolves in the Arctic, and in the near vicinity, is quite healthy thankfully. I am a little worried, however, about the population of Arctic Hares living under my house.

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