Most people do not know that wolves can bark, and this video actually proves that they do. But still, there are some ppl in the comments that just don't want to accept this fact, and still say that this is a dog. 🤦🏻♀️
Adam considered them dogs in the garden of Eden? If someone were to rear end your suv; first thing would be you’d call your insurance and say “somebody hit my car” , do you think your insurance will cut you off mid sentence and say “correction ma’am someone hit your suv, not car” . Point exactly when folks say chimps isn’t monkeys when they clearly all have the same nose and scream with alike personality traits. Don’t get mad because your people enjoy DISCOVERING things and RENAMING them randomly
It's been awhile since I posted this but I still get many comments attempting to spread blatantly wrong information about this animal. From now on, I'll be removing any comments that are clearly misinformed, as I've learned that people are very set in what they would like to believe about things, especially wolves. I've had too much time studying animal biology professionally to allow a bunch of internet wolfaboos try to explain to me and spread to others that "this is part dog! Wolves don't bark!!" (Despite the evidence in front of them, despite me filming this myself) or that "dogs are wolves" and "vice versa" because they fell for the poorly marketed Blue Dog Food commercials and seemed to never take or understand a basic biology class in their lives.
@@MrMuel1205 No, dogs are not wolves. Dogs may be classified as a subspecies of wolf as they are the domesticated form, but dogs only share a common ancestor with the wolves of today. They can interbreed, but they aren't the same animal. They may be in the same species, but subspecies exist, and that doesn't make them the same animal. They have very different psychology, diets, and countless other things. But please, go on about comparing something like a chihuahua or a beagle to a wolf. Taxonomically I suppose you could say similarly to a rectangle that all dogs are wolves but not all wolves are dogs, but when most people talk about wolves they're talking about something like the grey wolf or other similar subspecies, they aren't talking about dogs. That's a problem with having common names the same as the species name. I also fail to see the point of your comment here; a wolf is being displayed in the video, which is very much not a dog.
The 'Wolves don't bark' claim is valid if you understand 'WILD wolves don't bark'. One held in captivity, that is definitely starting to become domesticized, will bark. Or have adolescent tendencies (Which include barking) The closest thing you can get is a couple of short 'barks' included in a howl to communicate differently. But the traditional bark, or one similar to this video, simply doesn't happen in the wild with fully grown wolves.
Somehow I feel people are associating the meow of a cat to the bark of a dog; meowing is to communicate with humans and is only seen in donesticated cats, so therefore so is barking. Just people thinking they know more than they do. Btw, there's been a frozen wolf cub found in the arctic from the ice age with wooly rhino meat in its stomach, which a pack of wolves couldn't take down on their own, showing the first signs of domestication of wolves, if I recall correctly, which is pretty cool
Wasn't this taken at the wolf sanctuary? Xd Darn you're lucky they didn't catch you taping that. Beautiful proof wolves can bark though, and great video, thumbs up.
Wolf in the wild usually do not bark. They are able to but they only do it because humans..just like cats. Cats meow because they want something from the human. So does this Wolf. This is not a dog. This is a Wolf that wants something from the human.
@@johndoherty487 Cherry states that wolves bark "only... because humans". That implies that the action of barking is only tied to humans which is not true. Dogs (and by extension Wolves) barks around humans to get their attention. In the wild where humans are not around, barking is relegated to an alarm function.
See this is what I mean wolves do bark people just don’t realize it and I’ve come across some people who told me they didn’t when I know that wasn’t true. I am a wolf myself and I bark to
Wolves don't bark a lot in the wild. But are still capable of barking. And bark a lot around humans. In a similar way to how cat's meow at us. But usually not at each other.
there's tons, just not a lot biologically. Domestication does have associated genes - see the fox experiment from Russia. But owning one is in a different league from a dog.
The biggest wolfdogs barkable the father and mother of big small medium tiny dogs which people's calls the street dogs which are domestic animals 😘😘😘😘😘😘😘
@@WereRen A common ancestor of the Modern Natural Wild Wolves. Domesticated Dog's are still Taxonomically part of the same Wolf species as Modern Wolves. Dogs are a member of the Canis Lupus wolf family. Just another subspecies of wolf. Like the Eurasian Wolf/Canis Lupus Lupus, Eastern American Wolf/Canis Lupus Lycaon, And Domestic Dog's are Canis Lupus Familiaris.
@@WereRen Technically speaking though, a wolf is a dog. It falls under the family Canidae, which is the same family that dogs, foxes, coyotes, and etc come from.
@@ookami0189 Wolves are NOT dogs. That's straight up misinformation. Dogs come from a common ancestor of wolves, but wolves are not dogs. It's similar to how all humans are primates, but not all primates are humans. A family doesn't mean that they're the same thing, rather that they are at least loosely related, at most able to interbreed- but they are not the same thing. I've had 5+ years of college biology classes and have spent countless hours studying this animal. Don't fall for the poorly marketed Blue Dog Food commercials telling you that Fido is the same thing as a wolf. They just are not, and not "vice versa", either.
I really hate when people say “when dogs get loose in the wild and they see wolves the wolves let them in the pack.” Absolute fucking morons when a wolf sees a dog it’s going to kill it. Even if it’s a female in heat the wolves will find the scent then realize it’s not a dog and then kill it and wolves can’t bark
I absolutely agree with the first thing you said whoever says that I mean I'm not going to call them morons it's not something I particularly like to do with others but I will say it's a pretty ridiculous thing to say. As for the second one wolves do bark as you can see in this video but the thing is they don't do so often which is probably why people don't believe they actually bark
All members of the Canine family can bark (even foxes). Not just dogs. Wolves don't bark a lot like dogs do, but that does not mean that they cannot bark. They just don't do it much.