The amount of offspring a wolf produces depends one the species. Some species of wolf have large litters and others have relatively small ones. For example:
* The Grey Wolf can have anything from one to fourteen pups per litter, although the average litter size is just four to six pups. * The Red Wolf will typically have only two or three pups per litter. * The Arctic Wolf will normally give birth to around four or five pups a litter. * The Prairie Wolf, also know as Coyote, generally have larger litters. These can be from one pup to nineteen pups per litter. The average litter size is nearer six pups.
The average wolf litter is 5 or 6 pups, the largest wolf litter on record is 17 pups.
Approximately, 3-6
They can have up to 3-4.
six
45
35
Wolves regurgatate to make edible food for their cubs (baby wolves) until the cubs can eat solid food.
They mate
1 - 11 cubs per litter; the average is 6. There is one litter per year.
Young wolves are called wolf pups.
No. Wolves aren't where polar bear cubs are located. Male polar bears if they are hungry will hunt a cub and eat it.
They don't. Wolves are from the genus canis (in other words, dogs) and regardless of whether they are feral (wild) or domesticated (bred from wild over many generations) all dogs have pups, bears and lions have cubs.
The collective noun is a pack of wolves or a litter of cubs.
Donkeys will only have foals, it is impossible for a donkey to have cubs as cubs are the young of bears, wolves, lions, foxes, tigers.
Wolves mate so they can reproduce and have cubs that will carry their genes and make their pack larger.
Well wolves are usually not very aggressive but if they were it would be because they are trying to protect there cubs.
pupYoung wolves are called pups or cubs. The entire pack takes care of the young, which are often born in litter of up to six at a time.
Well polar bears can have at least 2 cub at birth, but I do not no how many cubs they can have per year.