Solo elk hunts are a bad idea for wolves. At best they end with the wolf going away hungry, and frequently the wolf gets stomped.
One study showed that lone wolves hunting elk have a about an 8% success rate, and âI think that is a high estimate,â wolf researcher Kira Cassidy told Cowboy State Daily.
The Brave Wolf That Couldnât
Wildlife tour guide Bo Welden caught video this summer of a wolf in Yellowstone National Park taking off after an elk and trying to bring the animal down itself.
The wolf initially tried getting some elk calves to flush, Weldon told Cowboy State Daily. And when that didnât work, the predator dared a short chase after a cow elk that was separated from its herd.
But before long, as the video shows, the cow makes its way back to three other elk. Thatâs when the wolf has an âoh crapâ moment.
Realizing itâs up against insurmountable odds, the wolf abruptly ends his pursuit of the cow, turns tail and runs away.
One of the cows, possibly the one the wolf had been chasing, tears after it with a vengeance.
After nearly getting ground-pounded by the livid elk, the wolf finally manages to get away clean. Still hungry, but likely wiser.
Welden said that heâs seen wolves break hunts off on a few occasions.
âEventually, they just decided that the return on the investment wasnât worth it,â he said.
Roadside Drama
Weldon said he was driving through the Hayden Valley area of the park on his way to pick up some tour clients. He spotted a black wolf that was âquite visible, standing across the river.â
He decided to stop for a while and watch the wolf. Heâs familiar with many of Yellowstoneâs wolves, and thinks the black wolf was a 2-year-old from the Wapiti Lake Pack.
Even wolves that are members of established packs will sometimes strike out on their own to scout, and possibly hunt, Welden said.
He watched the wolf approach a group of elk, at first trying to pick off a calf.
The wolfâs tactic was to try getting a calf to flush and flee into the open, making it an easy target. But the mamma elk were having none of that and kept their calves still, Welden said.
Next, the wolf apparently tried getting the entire elk herd to panic and run for the river. Itâs plan might have been to single out the lone cow it was chasing, while the rest of the elk waded into the water.
But the wolfâs plan didnât work out.
âThat cow elk said, âNot today, my friend, not today,ââ Welden said.
Watery Stomp Fest
Elk sometimes wade into water to evade wolves, Welden said.
âThe water is up to the elksâ bellies, but that means itâs up to the wolvesâ noses,â he said, adding that puts the wolves at an extreme disadvantage.
âIf youâre a wolf and you get to close and try to bite the elk, the elk is going to step on you and break your leg, or break your ribs,â he said.
Even for a pack of wolves, elk hunting is challenging, Welden said.
âWhen it comes to elk hunting, thereâs not an easy cheat for that,â he said.
Solo Hunts Extremely Rare
The wolf that went after the elk alone was brave, or foolhardy, because thatâs rare behavior, wildlife biologists said.
âOf the many hunts Iâve seen, only one was by a wolf alone. A wolf by itself can kill an elk but it is fairly rare,â said Cassidy, who is a research associate with the Yellowstone Wolf Project.
Most wolves are good at figuring out when theyâve tried to bite off more than they can chew, Wyoming Game And Fish Large Carnivore Specialist Dan Thompson told Cowboy State Daily.
âWolves are smart and adaptable, they do best when they work in a group as a team but obviously transient wolves need to eat and they're not going to pass up a meal, but they also know when they're outmatched pretty quickly,â he said.
Even going after calf elk solo is a dicey proposition, Cassidy said.
âIâve seen plenty of elk calf hunts and the cow can usually protect the calf well unless there are multiple wolves,â she said.
Contact Mark Heinz at mark@cowboystatedaily.com
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.