a wolf because a husky was domesticated from a wolf and the wolf has more power and strength. because husky is home grown and wolf lives in a forest so he is wild and he knows how fight better because he lives with other wild animals thank you
If you're meaning the husky with the bandana, it's Jenna. If you're meaning the great white wolf, it's Aniu.
It is possible.
A horse can kill just one wolf. Wolf pack would be a different story.
Odd future wolf gang kill them all
a wolf because a husky was domesticated from a wolf and the wolf has more power and strength. because husky is home grown and wolf lives in a forest so he is wild and he knows how fight better because he lives with other wild animals thank you
No! But they are in the same family.
I would say a husky would be a much better pet. I would not get a wolf if you do not have a permit or papers.
Nevada (wolf) and UConn (husky).
No
You dog could have some husky wolf mixed in it. All you have to do is take it to the vet and have test run on the dog.
Todd said yes.
like a wolf of a howling dog
all dogs are descended from wolves. The fact that a husky looks like a wolf is a mere coincidence. Just because a husky is black does not make it closer to wolves. not all wolves are black.
A husky typically has erect, triangular ears, while a timber wolf's ears are more rounded. Huskies also have a more compact body size compared to the larger and leaner build of a timber wolf. Additionally, a husky's tail is often curled over its back or to the side, whereas a timber wolf's tail hangs down.
Not really. This sort of mating would produce an animal that is 50% Siberian Husky (assuming the Husky was a pure-breed) and 50% wolf. (assuming there was no dog in the wolf). The exact percentage of each type of wolf would very much depend on how much of those species was in the animal used for the mating, but the offspring would still technically be a 50-50 wolfdog. If you wanted more Siberian Husky than wolf, then you would have to breed a pure Husky with a wolf/husky cross. Assuming said cross was half husky and half wolf, you might then end up with offspring that's around 75% Husky and 25% wolf. Take that animal and breed it to another pure Husky, and you'd then get offspring that was more than 75% husky and less than 25% wolf…and so on. That being said, actually getting these percentages isn't likely to be as simple as the theory makes it sound. You have to remember that the random arrangement of genes within gametes could easily result in a half breed producing offspring that's more than 25% wolf - it very much depends on which genes each pup happens to get, and that's something that's very much out of our control.
Yes.