If a wolf is desperately hungry, I imagine, it would attack a human. They would prefer the very young, the crippled, or the old, since they are smaller or clearly aren't as strong as other humans. There are cases where even coyotes, which are much smaller than wolves, have tried to hunt children.
Nowadays, it's very very rare to find a man-eating wolf. Wolves, for the most part, fear humans and will keep their distance. It is thought, though, that European wolves used to be much more aggressive in the past (hundreds of years ago), and it was not unusual for a wolf to attack a human. Yes, but it is very unlikely that you would be attacked by one. The only situations I can think of are if...
A) The wolf is very hungry and there is no other food available
B) You are very young, weak and unarmed
C) You approach the wolf knowingly, especially if it has cubs or if it is wounded
Wolves never attack for the sake of it.
Not generally no. The only time a wolf if likely to attack a human for food is if it has lost its fear of humans in sub-urban areas. Once a wolf has tasted a human once it is not uncommon for them to continuing preying, which is usually when they get killed....
Although attacks by wolves are rare, they do occur. For a list of attacks in North America, click on this link.
no
they were going to destroy his plantation and even him himself, since they are maneating ants and destroy everything in their path. in reality these are real ants!
Alaskan Tundra Wolves, Alexander Archipelago Wolves, Arabian Wolves, Arctic Wolves, Baffin Island Wolves, Bernard's Wolves, British Columbian Wolves, Cascade Mountain Wolves, Dire Wolves, Eastern Timber Wolves, Ethiopian Wolves, Common Gray Wolves, Great Plains Wolves, Greenland Wolves, Hokkaido Wolves, Honshu Wolves, Hudson Bay Wolves, Iberian Wolves, Indian Wolves, Interior Alaskan Wolves, Iranian Wolves, Italian Wolves, Kenai Peninsula Wolves, Labrador Wolves, Mackenzie Valley Wolves, Mackenzie Tundra Wolves, Maned Wolves, Manitoba Wolves, Mexican Wolves, Mogollon Mountain Wolves, Newfoundland Wolves, Red Wolves, Southern Rocky Mountain Wolves, Texas Gray Wolves, Tibetan Wolves, Tundra Wolves, and Vancouver Island Wolves are all that I know of, and some of these might not even be around anymore.
Arctic Wolves Timber Wolves Red Wolves Ethiopian Wolves Indian Wolves Asiatic Wolves European Wolves (probably extinct)
Wolves in Wolves' Clothing was created in 2005.
Some species of wolves are the gray wolves, red wolves, antic wolves and the coyote-wolf hybrid.
Some wolves like gray wolves and arctic wolves are.
There were wolves in 1995 and there are still wolves.
A pack of wolves is a collection of wolves.
The collective nouns are a pack of wolves or a rout (or route) of wolves.
A pack of wolves.
- gray wolves - dire wolves - Alaskan wolves These Are The Most Powerful Wolves In Order From Strongest To weakest But They Are All Powerful.