It depends on where you live. In the most places of the US it's illegal to own a wolf-dog, let alone an actual wolf! However, if you have lisence, you are allowed to take in an injured, or abandoned wolf, but if you do that, once the wolf can survive on it's own, you /have/ to let it back to the wild
No, you are not allowed to own a wolf in Houston. (Please see related question below.)
A wolf hybrid.
the first domesticated dog was a wolf and they ws domesticated when cavemen was on this earth because they went out and searched for obandant wolf cubs and brought them up as if they was their own dog.
No. "The dog is a domesticated sub-species of the wolf" is a complete sentence, an independent clause. A dependent clause is one that cannot stand on its own as a sentence.
it depends on the conditions. if it were a weak wolf,maybe an injured one, the dog may either leave it for dead, or finish it off, seeing it as a threat. on rare occasion, the dog may attempt to help the wolf. If it were the dog that is injured or weak, chances are the wolf will finish it off, unless the wolf is a female who has recently lost it's pups, and the dog is very young. in this case the wolf might treat the dog as its own pup. hope this help! :-) ask me anything about animals you ever need!
There was a Catholic Chaplain on our military base with a shepard.
There is a game called Feral Heart where you can customize your own canine or feline. Try it :)
That dog abuser shouldn't be allowed to ever own another animal in his life. He should be in jail still
They can, as they are so closely related - they are still both a part of the Canis family. However, a mix between a wolf and a dog can be very aggressive. Usually, it is used to humans, but is still as strong and has the same temperament as a wolf.
The correct sentence is He is allowed to do it on his own.
Well, all dogs will probably try tasting their own, or another dog's, feces sometime in their life. However, since that instinct is derived from their wolf/wild dog ancestors it would be accurate to assume that the more domesticated the dog breed, the less likely it will do this regularly. For example, a wolf type dog or a hound dog would be more likely to eat their own deficate than say a chihuahua or pug (dogs that differ greatly from their wolve ancestors).