Yes. The Arctic wolf is a subspecies of the grey wolf.
No. The Grey wolf is a wolf reining in forested reigons. It's fur color can range from black, grey, orange, red, silver, white, etc. But the Arctic wolf is a breed that specifically lives in the Arctic, or colder climates.An Arctic wolf is a type of gray wolf, but not all gray wolves are Arctic wolves.
A article wolf
Yes! The Arctic Wolf, sub-species to the Gray Wolf, is sometimes called the Tundra Wolf.
Yes it is. The Arctic wolf is a subspecies of the Gray/Timber Wolf, with the taxonomic name of Canis lupus arctos. It is not to be confused with the Alaskan Tundra wolf, Canis lupus tundrarus, which bears the same coat colouration of all-white fur like the Arctic wolf does.
No, there are several other subspecies of the gray wolf that live in the Arctic, including the tundra wolf, Greenland wolf, Yukon wolf and others.
an Arctic wolf - is in the Arctic an red wolf - is in the USA of the states north Carolina and south Carolina an gray wolf - lives in they parts of Alaska and Canada the Mexican gray wolf - lives in mountain forests of Mexico
They have about the same aggression. It is only the Arctic wolf that is less aggressive, but this is because they have to save their energy, and somehow they have stronger family bonds - they are nicer to each other.
No, there are several other subspecies of the gray wolf that live in the Arctic, including the tundra wolf, Greenland wolf, Yukon wolf and others.
there are many names for the gray wolf, such as Canis lupus, dingo, Timber Wolf Genus, arctic wolf, tundra wolf, Mackenzie Valley wolf, timber wolf, plains wolf, Mexican wolf, lobo and lone wolf. But the most common name is the question your asking; the (Grey) Gray Wolf is the most common name.
Yes, completely different. Though they live in the same areas, (North America, Canada Greenland, Siberia Etc) they are two different types of wolf. Where as the Grey wolf's colour can vary, the Arctic wolf is nearly always white. Being as it lives in snowy and Tundra areas, it has a thick white coat for camouflage and warmth. It's paws are rough for grip on the thick snow and it's ears are small and rounded to keep the heat in. Grey Wolves have similar features to this. But if you compare the two, the Grey wolf's ears are not as rounded and they do not have as much thickness in their coats. I hope that answered your question. Bye! :~D No. The Arctic wolf is merely a subspecies of the gray wolf, Canis Lupus, but a gray wolf nonetheless. The Arctic wolf is Canis Lupus Arctos.
Gray and grey are basically the same words, just that "gray" is the american derivation of "grey". So, both ways are acceptable and are the same wolf.