I was inspired by my trip to Yellowstone and decided to do a tribal series! Animals of Yellowstone. Prints are available here or on Etsy and the original is available as well if you're willing to pay $4 for shipping world wide. 50% of all earnings made through sales of prints and products will go to donations towards Yellowstone national park. I have other products available on my society6 page as well. Also I'm working on commissions but I also have sketches due for art class and these finished pieces I'll be posting in the mean time.
Price: $5
A little about the grey wolf
Northern Rocky Mountain wolves, a subspecies of the gray wolf (Canis lupus), were native to Yellowstone when the park was established in 1872. Predator control was practiced here in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Between 1914 and 1926, at least 136 wolves were killed in the park; by the 1940s, wolf packs were rarely reported. By the 1970s, scientists found no evidence of a wolf population in Yellowstone; wolves persisted in the lower 48 states only in northern Minnesota and on Isle Royale in Michigan. An occasional wolf likely wandered into the Yellowstone area; however, no verifiable evidence of a breeding pair of wolves existed through the mid 1990s. In the early 1980s, wolves began to reestablish themselves near Glacier National Park in northern Montana; an estimated 75 wolves inhabited Montana in 1996. At the same time, wolf reports were increasing in central and north-central Idaho, and wolves were occasionally reported in the state of Washington. The wolf is listed as "endangered" throughout its historic range in the lower 48 states except in Minnesota, where it is "threatened."
Read more Here at the Yellowstone website.
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Society6
Etsy Page
Twitter
commission information
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artwork © Ashenee You may not use, copy, or redistribute this image/character in any way, shape, or form without my permission.
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Price: $5
A little about the grey wolf
Northern Rocky Mountain wolves, a subspecies of the gray wolf (Canis lupus), were native to Yellowstone when the park was established in 1872. Predator control was practiced here in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Between 1914 and 1926, at least 136 wolves were killed in the park; by the 1940s, wolf packs were rarely reported. By the 1970s, scientists found no evidence of a wolf population in Yellowstone; wolves persisted in the lower 48 states only in northern Minnesota and on Isle Royale in Michigan. An occasional wolf likely wandered into the Yellowstone area; however, no verifiable evidence of a breeding pair of wolves existed through the mid 1990s. In the early 1980s, wolves began to reestablish themselves near Glacier National Park in northern Montana; an estimated 75 wolves inhabited Montana in 1996. At the same time, wolf reports were increasing in central and north-central Idaho, and wolves were occasionally reported in the state of Washington. The wolf is listed as "endangered" throughout its historic range in the lower 48 states except in Minnesota, where it is "threatened."
Read more Here at the Yellowstone website.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Society6
Etsy Page
commission information
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
artwork © Ashenee You may not use, copy, or redistribute this image/character in any way, shape, or form without my permission.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Category Artwork (Traditional) / Animal related (non-anthro)
Species Wolf
Size 803 x 996px
File Size 102.5 kB
FA+

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