Yes, wolf packs can have two 'pack leaders', commonly referred to as the Alpha Female and Alpha Male. If a female leaves her pack and chooses a mate, and has pups and such, the parents are the "Alphas". During times when there is less food, wolves along an area tend to group together, and then will disperse after there is enough food, whether they travel to another area or if migrating animals return.
Sometimes, if an Alpha dies, there may only be one Alpha. The remaining Alpha may take on another mate, or remain single.
the strongest wolves are the alphas and the weakest wolves are the omegas
the most aggressive wolf in a pack is mostly the alphas of the pack, if a wolf in the pack disobeys one of the alphas there gonna get a beating, and others wolves in the pack might fear the alphas
In the wild grey wolves live up to 6 to 7 years, maybe 13 to 17 if they are alphas, if they eat well and don't fight with other packs often.
They get food, give it shelter, and teach it to run and etc. while the alphas are hunting
they need prey, fresh water, a strong pack, two alphas, and LOTS of room to be around
The duration of Alphas is 2580.0 seconds.
Wolves are nocturnal, meaning that, as opposed to humans, they are awake at night and sleep all day long! ... Oftentimes, wolves sleep right out in the open in a circle. They circle an area before settling down--the alphas always choose first!
The fourth Alphas book is The Top of the Feud Chain.
Alphas Kishoyian was born on 1994-10-12.
In a wolf pack, the alpha pair are the leaders who make decisions and maintain order. Below them are beta wolves who support the alphas and may eventually challenge them for dominance. Subordinate wolves follow the lead of the alphas and betas, contributing to hunting, caring for pups, and defending the territory.
Alphas was created on 2011-07-11.
The book Alphas has 272 pages. It was written by Lisi Harrison.