Wolves in Yellowstone National Park have been increasingly preying on bison, but going after them can be a dangerous undetaking, as the Junction Butte wolf pack recently learned.
The pack played a game of cat-and-mouse with a group of bison last week, waiting for a vulnerable baby bison to separate from the herd, wildlife photographer and conservationist Julie Argyle told Cowboy State Daily.Â
She watched the game unfold, and caught a video clip of the moment when the wolves finally saw an opportunity, and went for it.Â
When a yearling calf bison and its mother became separated from the main group, the chase was on.Â
With the wolves hot on their tails, the two bison sprinted back toward the safety of the main group, with the mother bison putting herself between her calf and the predators.Â
They made it in time.Â
Thatâs when the mother and another adult bison, which appeared to be a huge bull, went on the offensive, lowering their heads and lunging at the wolves. They also kicked viciously with their hind legs.Â
Argyle said that as near as she could tell, all the wolves and bison walked away from the encounter intact.Â
The wolves didnât sink their teeth into any bison, but also managed to escape the angry bovinesâ potentially crushing blows.Â
Bison Is On The Wolf Menu
Wolf packs in Yellowstone in recent years have been shifting toward preying on bison, National Park Service wildlife biologist Dan Stahler previously told Cowboy State Daily.Â
Thatâs partly because of shrinking elk numbers in the parkâs northern region.Â
Wolves risk injury or death when they hunt any large animals, but with bison, the risk factor increases dramatically, Stahler said. Â
âWolves are persistent,â Stahler said. A bison kill âis usually a long-lasting event, just because itâs so difficult, and itâs dangerous. Weâve documented wolves getting killed hunting bison over the years.â
He added that wolvesâ bison hunting tactics involve patience â waiting and watching a herd, looking for an opening.Â
In other words, just the sort of thing that Argyle witnessed and took video of.Â
Argyle said that sheâs familiar with the Junction Butte pack, which currently has about 11 members. Despite their failure that day, theyâre experienced bison hunters, and sheâs seen them succeed on other occasions.Â
The late winter and spring this year has been good for bison hunting, she said.
Many of the elk left to go spend the winter north of the park near Gardiner, Montana. But the bison lingered inside the park, perhaps to avoid bison hunts, also north of the Yellowstone, Argyle said.Â
âThatâs The Way Of The Wolfâ
Wolf packs have fascinating social structures. Theyâre highly territorial, and sometimes fights break out between packs.Â
Sometimes old friends become foes, or vise versa.Â
Thatâs what happened with the Junction Butte Pack, Argyle said.Â
They used to be led by an alpha female, one of Yellowstoneâs most famous wolves, 907F.Â
Wolf 907F was 11.8 years old when she died. Thatâs a lifespan nearly unheard of for a wild wolf. Wolves in Yellowstone National Park typically live an average of 3.5to 4 years, according to wildlife biologists.Â
Wolf 907FÂ died on Christmas Day 2024Â from injuries she suffered a few days earlier during a fight with member of the Rescue Creek Pack.Â
The Rescue Creek Pack began as an offshoot of the Junction Butte Pack.Â
Since 907Fâs death, things have come full circle for the two packs.Â
The Junction Butte Pack traveled out of the park into Montana, where more of its key members died, likely killed by hunters, Argyle said.Â
However, those openings prompted some males from the Rescue Creek pack rejoined the Junction Butte pack. And now the Junction Butte pack is thriving again, Argyle said.
âIt provided a better future for the Junction Butte Pack, after some of the older members were lost in Montana,â she said.Â
âAs sad as it was, her (wolf 907F) being killed, thatâs the way of the wolf,â Argyle added.Â
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.





