Classroom lesson Ā· Wildlife Ā· šŸ‡µšŸ‡¾ Paraguay

Maned Wolf

The fox on stilts of the South American grasslands

Photo Ā· Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The maned wolf looks like someone crossed a fox with a deer — it has a beautiful rusty-red coat, a dark mane along its back, and incredibly long black legs that let it see above the tall grasslands where it lives. It is the tallest wild dog in South America and one of the most unusual-looking animals on the planet.

Tell me more

Despite being called a wolf, the maned wolf is not closely related to wolves or foxes — it is in its very own branch of the dog family, almost like an only child with no close cousins. Its long legs are not just for looks: they help it peer over the tall grasses of the Chaco and savannah to spot prey and watch for danger.

Maned wolves are mostly active at dusk and dawn — the golden hours when the grasslands glow orange. They eat a surprising mix of things: small animals like armadillos and rabbits, but also lots of fruit and vegetables. Their favourite food is a tomato-like fruit called the wolf apple (lobeira in Portuguese). This love of fruit makes them important seed dispersers — they eat the fruit and scatter seeds across large distances.

Maned wolves are shy and usually live alone rather than in packs, padding quietly through the grasses at night. Scientists study them using radio-tracking collars and footprint casts. In Paraguay, conservation groups are working to protect the open grasslands the maned wolf needs, because these habitats are gradually being turned into farmland.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01The maned wolf looks like a mix of different animals. Can you describe it to someone using only comparisons to animals they already know?
  2. 02By spreading seeds, animals help plants grow in new places. Can you think of another animal that helps plants spread?
  3. 03Why might it be a problem if grasslands are turned into farmland? Who else lives there besides the maned wolf?
Try this

Classroom activity

Imagine you are a nature documentary presenter. Write a 30-second script introducing the maned wolf to a TV audience who has never seen one before. Try to make it exciting and descriptive — then practise reading it aloud.