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[Animals] Rare wolverine photographed in Yellowstone National Park


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LINK:https://www.nbcnews.com/news/animal-news/rare-wolverine-photographed-yellowstone-national-park-rcna19705

Naturalists last weekend photographed a rare wolverine in Yellowstone National Park.

By Tim Fitzsimons A tour guide and former park ranger last weekend had what he called a "phenomenal" encounter with one of Yellowstone National Park's rarest and most elusive animals: a wolverine. He even snapped a picture to prove it.

MacNeil Lyons, owner of Yellowstone Insight, was with a tour group in the park’s northern reaches March 5 when the visitors spotted what he calls a "unicorn." The wolverine — the largest species in the mustelid, or weasel, family — is related to otters, ferrets and minks. In North America, the wolverine's southernmost range touches Yellowstone National Park, according to the National Wildlife Federation.

Lyons said wolverines are known to search far and wide for food in winter and may even sniff out an avalanche-buried moose carcass that it can burrow deep into snow and scavenge from for weeks. “A wolverine is a scavenger, and it’ll eat anything it can put its mouth around, and in that bleak, high-snow country, it’s looking for dead animals, anything that’s died, a carcass,” Halfpenny said. In normal years, Halfpenny says, it's typical to get three solid reports of wolverine sightings in Yellowstone, but never a photo. "I haven't had time to run through our tracking databases yet to decide if it's a male or female," he said. Halfpenny, who runs the tracking education company A Naturalist’s World and is licensed to submit animal data to Yellowstone officials, said members of the Yellowstone Cougar Project this week found more wolverine tracks and even obtained a hair sample. If a follicle is attached or a nearby scat pile identified, Halfpenny said, researchers might have valuable DNA information to submit to Yellowstone Wolf Project, which collects data on wolves and other rare mammals. "If they can prove whether it's one or two, that would be neat," he said.

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