WOLF
The lone wolf’s howl has long been chosen as a symbol of melancholy and
loss. Now researchers have demonstrated that the choice was accurate.
Howling is not related to the stress
level of the crying canine or the dominance status of the departing
wolf; the best predictor of a wolf’s howl is the closeness of the
howler’s relationship with the wolf leaving its side. The study is in
the journal Current Biology. [Francesco Mazzini et al., Wolf howling is mediated by relationship quality rather than underlying emotional stress]
The researchers separated individuals living in Austria’s Wolf Science
Center. They recorded the resulting howls for 20 minutes after
separation. Then the scientists took a sample of saliva from the howling
wolves to measure circulating levels of cortisol, a hormonal stress
indicator.
Cortisol levels increased during all separations, whether a preferred
partner or any other pack mate was taken away. But howling was much more
pronounced when a close partner was removed.
The researchers thus concluded that the level of howling was determined
by the relationship of the howler with the separated wolf, regardless of
the removed wolf’s rank. Because even a wolf, apparently, can have a
best friend.
—Arielle Duhaime-Ross