Wednesday, July 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. wolves use line to pull up crab traps in first possible tool use by species

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Nov, 2025 10:38 AM
  • B.C. wolves use line to pull up crab traps in first possible tool use by species

Researchers have captured video footage of wild wolves in British Columbia pulling crab traps out of the sea by their lines to eat the bait inside, in the first evidence of possible tool use by the animals.

A report released Monday in the scientific journal Ecology and Evolution by researchers Kyle Artelle and Paul Paquet says they placed cameras on the beach aimed at Heiltsuk First Nation crab traps to work out what was repeatedly damaging them.

The traps, set up near Bella Bella, on B.C.'s central coast, were being used to control the invasive European green crab, and some were in deeper water submerged at all times, leading researchers to believe the damage that started in 2023 was caused by marine mammals.

"We were going, 'Well, what the heck is doing this, right?'" said Artelle, a researcher with State University of New York's College of Environmental Science and Forestry, who was involved with the Heiltsuk Nation's efforts to respond to the green crabs.

"It can't be a bear, a wolf. They're not going to dive down to get to the trap. So, what is getting the traps?"

Their assumptions were wrong.

Within a day of the cameras being set up in May last year, researchers  captured footage of a sea wolf emerging from the water with a buoy hanging from its mouth.

The footage then showed the wolf dropping the buoy on the beach, picking up the exposed line, and pulling it until the crab trap emerged from the water.

The wolf then picked up the trap with its mouth, moved it to shallower waters and ate the bait inside.

"We had to pick our jaws off the floor," Artelle said.

"We know that they're really, really smart, but it hadn't crossed our mind that, oh, maybe a wolf is swimming out to the deeper traps and bringing the buoy to shore, pulling the line up just like a person would."

The cameras then picked up a second sea wolf also pulling up a crab trap in a similar way earlier this year, leading researchers to believe other wolves in the local pack may have learned from each other.

Sea wolves are a grey wolf subspecies known for their marine-based diet. 

As for how the behaviour started, Artelle said researchers can only speculate.

"We ultimately don't know, but the two most likely explanations in our minds, one would be that the wolves started doing this with traps that were exposed at a low tide because that's really easy," Artelle said.

"There might've been this incremental learning that started with the trap fully onshore to traps partly submerged, to then associating the line with the trap and then the buoy with the line … It would make a lot of sense, and that's often how we learn."

Researchers say a few cameras at the B.C. site are now dedicated 24-7 to the crab traps to track the behaviour of sea wolves in the area, while work is "in progress" to prevent too much damage to the traps that may inhibit the invasive crab study.

"Some really special things are happening here, and we want to understand more about that. What else is happening on the ground? What else do these wolves have to teach us? And so that's a focus for the next decades as we explore more about wolves here," Artelle said.

"This is really just the tip of the iceberg."

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - Kyle Artelle

MORE National ARTICLES

Air India flight makes emergency landing in Iqaluit after online threat

Air India flight makes emergency landing in Iqaluit after online threat
An Air India flight made an emergency landing this morning in Nunavut following a security threat posted online. RCMP say Air India Flight 127 was en route from New Delhi to Chicago, but landed instead at the Iqaluit International Airport at 5:21 a.m.

Air India flight makes emergency landing in Iqaluit after online threat

Port Hardy homicide targeted

Port Hardy homicide targeted
Police on Vancouver Island say the deadly assault of a man in Port Hardy last weekend appears to have been targeted. Port Hardy R-C-M-P say they responded to a report of an injured person on Sunday afternoon, and the person later died of their injuries in hospital. 

Port Hardy homicide targeted

No injuries in Langley plane crash

No injuries in Langley plane crash
Mounties say no one was hurt in a small plane crash in Langley on Thursday. R-C-M-P says officers along with ambulance services responded to a report of a possible plane crash yesterday afternoon.

No injuries in Langley plane crash

Gruelling days and gratitude for Canadian line workers helping with hurricane outages

Gruelling days and gratitude for Canadian line workers helping with hurricane outages
They are some of the hundreds — possibly thousands — of Canadian line workers who have been called into service to help rebuild power grids after Helene and now Hurricane Milton have left millions of Americans in the dark.

Gruelling days and gratitude for Canadian line workers helping with hurricane outages

B.C. Muslim Association wants Conservative candidate removed for 'time bomb' post

B.C. Muslim Association wants Conservative candidate removed for 'time bomb' post
In a letter to the party and Surrey South candidate Brent Chapman, the association says a statement like the one he posted on Facebook nine years ago "promotes division and hate" and it's imperative he be asked to step down.

B.C. Muslim Association wants Conservative candidate removed for 'time bomb' post

No jail time after fatal 2020 stabbing at Vancouver's former Biltmore Hotel

No jail time after fatal 2020 stabbing at Vancouver's former Biltmore Hotel
The sentencing decision by B.C. provincial court Judge Reginald Harris says 31-year-old Anthony Woods must instead continue to live at a recovery home in the Interior for the first year of his two-year conditional sentence. 

No jail time after fatal 2020 stabbing at Vancouver's former Biltmore Hotel