Yes they are. Wolves are highly social animals that live in packs, but not all wolves stay with the same pack their entire lives. This, however, doesn’t mean they prefer to be alone.
Young adult wolves who end up leaving the pack they were born into usually do so to form a pack of their own. That’s the big difference here – lone wolves don’t leave because they want to stay alone, they leave in order to find a mate, their own territory, and form their own pack.
These “lone wolves” are actually called “Dispersers.” They play an important role for wolves as a whole: they’re the ones who keep wolves healthy by bringing new genes into the mix with different family groups.
They also bring the wolf population into new areas. As they leave their home territory and head out in search of new surroundings and a mate, it allows them to settle in new, unoccupied space. They may travel hundreds of miles to find their new territory.
So really, a “lone wolf” isn’t one who wants to be alone because they don't like being around others. They’re a wolf who elects to be alone temporarily as they try to find a mate and find a place to have a family. They are the key to the genetic survival of the species.
Not quite so scary after all, are they? Like with many things about wolves, the idea seems to come from a misunderstanding of what wolves actually do.
Be sure to forward this blog to someone today so they can learn about lone wolves too!
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