Scientists brave the deep snows and frigid cold of arctic Alaska to study the furtive and ferocious wolverine Photographs by Peter Mather; Text by Arik Gabbai A female wolverine roams the Arctic ...
Will reductions in Arctic snow cover make tundra-dwelling wolverines more vulnerable to climate change than previously thought? That's a question scientists hope an innovative method described in a ...
A wolverine walks across the snow in 2018 near the Toolik Field Station on Alaska's North Slope. Wolverines are elusive and need a lot of space, so they are hard to count, but a new study gives an ...
They’re Arctic Survivors. How Will They Adapt to Climate Change? Photographs by Peter Mather Text by Henry Fountain February 11, 2021 On Alaska’s North Slope, treeless and snow-shrouded for much of ...
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Wolverines are the Honey Badgers of the North
Wolverines don’t get the spotlight often—but they should. Fierce, fearless, and built for the cold, these northern predators are like the honey badgers of the Arctic. From taking on animals twice ...
If you liked this story, share it with other people. The media has long focused on the impacts of climate change on polar bears. But with Arctic temperatures rising fast (this winter saw the warmest ...
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