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  • Writer's pictureVadim Sidorovich

Torn Ear the (un)fortunate wolf mother

Updated: Jun 7, 2020

Coauthor: Irina Rotenko

We continue our series of posts featuring stories about individual wolves, lynxes or other carnivores that we succeeded to learn by means of camera-traps and tracking. Carnivore life stories are quite complicated and do not fit well into standard patterns. Many modern zoologists with their cabinet-zoology, which is much based on a GPS GSM- telemetry as well as on useless sophisticated statistics and modeling of everything, try to standardize carnivore species behaviour, ecology and life on the whole. However, in the reality individual carnivore life stories are so various, and are never the same.


This second life story post tells about an adult wolf female, that lost her pups for several years in a row. Also, another one or two adult females being with her in the same wolf breeding group have failed in their breeding, too.


This wolf female has been easily recognized by the tear in her right ear since February 2017, when we began to call her Torn Ear. Before that we recognized her by whitish stripes in the lower part of her head and black marks at the eyes.



Torn Ear with one of the wolf males.




In Naliboki Forest since February 2013 Torn Ear has been registered living and reproducing in the wolf group of three breeding females and one or two adult males altogether. On 11th May 2013 we discovered three wolf litters in the dens within the small spot of spruce-black alder forest somewhere between the localities of Drazdy and Rabachova. The wolf dens that belonged to the three breeding female wolves were situated at the distance of about 430 meters, 220 meters and 380 meters between each other. The pups in one litter were about 40 days old, the second litter was about 15-18 days old, and the third one consisted of small blind pups. The first and second litters were mixed as: 2 pups of 40 days old and 2 pups of 15-18 days old; and as 2 and 3 such different age pups, respectively. It happened like that because the mothers stole pups from the dens of each other. None of the pups including the litter of Torn Ear survived by the winter 2013-2014.


40 days old pups and 15-18 days old pups from one den of the wolf breeding group (including Torn ear) in May of 2013.

Torn Ear in 2013 before she got her right ear torn.

During the breeding seasons of 2014 and 2015 we did not collect enough precise information about the reproduction in this wolf group. At least, we knew that they bred and had pups till the late summer or autumn, but during the coming winter there were again five adults only without any pups i.e. three adult females and two adult quite big males. Sometimes, one of the males walked separately, but within the same territory of the other wolves of the pack. Again, sometimes we registered that Torn Ear walked separately with one of the males, while other two females stayed with another male within the same territory.


In April-May 2016 one or more females from the wolf breeding group that included Torn Ear gave birth in the Rabachova locality; there was registered minimum one litter. But all the pups disappeared by the end of May.


In February 2017 Torn Ear (when she was with a normal right ear) and other four members of the wolf pack were taken in a fladry enclosure in the localities of Kurhany and Symonava by the local hunters. That day, by driving there, we saw a number of vehicles and more than thirty hunters, who did the hunt-drive to kill the wolf pack. The hunter tried to do their bloody work during the whole day. Nevertheless, Torn Ear and other wolves escaped more or less safely from the fladry enclosure. One shot of hunter wounded the right ear of the female. Also one male wolf from the pack was wounded to the right hind leg, but he survived.


That fladry enclosure.

In the late April 2017 all three females of the wolf pack gave birth definitely. The distances between their initial dens were 0.92, 0.72 and 0.95 km from each other. One male mostly looked after two breeding females including Torn Ear, whereas the other male took care about the third breeding female. Torn Ear was registered visiting not only own den, but also the den of another breeding female, to which the same male served. Interestingly that at one of the dens all these five wolves were registered altogether on 1st May. We documented that two litters were killed by adult male lynx that we called Jury. It happened in the end of April and the first days of May, whereas the third litter disappeared in the mid-June. In 10-15 days afterwards all the five wolves started walking widely within the previous winter home range and marking a lot.


After the clear documentation that the two wolf dens were extirpated by the adult lynx male we started thinking that all previous breeding failures of the wolf pack happened due to the same lynx male aggressivity.


Jury the male lynx is entering the wolf den to kill pups. This day on 11th May 2017 there was a little some snowfall. This den did not belong to Torn Ear.


Torn ear at the den five days before.


Torn Ear at her burrow-den with pups. When Jury appeared at the den next minute, Torn Ear escaped letting Jury kill the pups.


In the late April 2018 the wolf breeding group consisting of Torn Ear, two more breeding females and still two adult males began preparing denning in the same Rabachova locality again. They prepared minimum 5 dens before any parturition. Everywhere in the places they stayed there were registered lynxes in the close proximity. Then suddenly before any giving birth the wolf breeding group disappeared and they were not found in the whole Naliboki Forest during the summer. We hypothesized that they emigrated from Naliboki Forest to breed in the surrounding more rural area where there were not so many lynxes around because of the dramatic experience of the previous May, when Jury the lynx had killed all their pups.


The first registration of Torn Ear in early March of 2019 in Naliboki Forest after long absence.

After a long absence, Torn Ear with one of the males and one of the females was found to come back to their former territory in early March 2019. They were with another unknown third female, which could be a young adult (i.e. the one survived pup of the year). The area was already occupied by other three wolves. These wolves were gradually sent away by the former owners including Torn Ear.


In late April 2019 Torn Ear and at least one more female of this wolf group gave birth. Torn Ear's den was placed in the Asovyja locality, while another female denned in the Rabachova locality. Their male served for both mothers, that together with their pups were situated at the distance about 3 km apart. Then since the mid May both mothers with their litters were registered on stay in the Asovyja locality. Another female's litter was situated in a badger outlier, where the pups were killed by a male lynx. We registered the tracks of the lynx entering the burrow-den and two pup remains about 40 and 120 meters away of the den. The litter of Torn Ear was saved and in July it consisted of 6 pups you may see in the photos below. Both females and their male took care about the pups.


We put more than ten camera traps in the both denning areas of Asovyja and Rabachova, so, hopefully we will get more interesting photos and information about Torn Ear and her pups soon.



Torn Ear is bringing food to the pups in the stomach.

Pups of Torn Ear in the beginning of July.
Pups of Torn Ear at the burrow-den of other female, where two weeks ago male lynx killed pups of this another female.
Pups of Torn Ear in the Beginning of August 2019.

Torn Ear and her pups in March 2020. They are still alive, perhaps, because of Torn Ear is so experienced survivor.
The new big male wolf in the Torn Ear pack, March 2020.

The second breeding female, that walked together with Torn Ear, gave birth around 3rd May (on 13th May we found her den with 9 pups about 10 days old), and the new adult male served for her (see the photos below). This subfamily of the Torn Ear breeding group (hereafter the first subfamily) moved for about 1.5 km after we discovered their active den.

Moreover, on 18th of May we photographed one more heavily pregnant female (not Torn Ear) at the distance of about 800 meters from the discovered den. That still pregnant female was plausibly one of the three wolves, which seemingly disappeared in the early April. Maybe they still stayed not faraway, but we did not know. This pregnant female plausibly gave birth on 19th or 20th of May, because on 21st May we found all the features of presence of one more den with pups there on the distance about 1-2 km from the first discovered active den. Another male served for this mother. That was the third founding male in the Torn Ear breeding group in May 2020.


Then in the last days of May this subfamily moved for distance of 2-2,5 km from the initial denning area and appeared at the distance about 1.8 km from the first mentioned subfamily actual denning area. In the photo below see one of the new dens of the second subfamily.


The breeding story of the old female Torn Ear in May 2020 was unclear, at first. Nowadays we got more or less sufficient information to reconstruct precisely enough her breeding story in 2020. Torn Ear is an old female wolf and in this year she got estrus quite late in the mid-March. Respectively, Torn Ear gave birth approximately on 20th of May at the distance about 0.7 km from the initial den of the first mentioned subfamily. However, that place was situated on the opposite site of the Biarezina medium-sized river.


Torn Ear, the mid-March 2020.

Torn Ear and two different adult males from her pack are investigating her former den, the mid-April 2020.

One of last photos of Torn Ear in early May 2020.

Torn Ear is mother again, 23rd May 2020.

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