🐺
Predators & Canids

Indian Wolf

Canis lupus pallipes

IUCN: Endangered
EndangeredIUCN Status
~3,000 in IndiaPopulation
18 – 30 kgAdult Weight
90 – 110 cmLength
CarnivoreDiet

About the Indian Wolf

The Indian wolf is the most endangered wolf subspecies in the world, found only in the open scrublands and grasslands of peninsular India. Unlike the grey wolves of Europe and North America, the Indian wolf is smaller, has a leaner build, and lacks the thick winter coat of its northern relatives — adaptations for life in semi-arid conditions rather than boreal forests. India's entire population of roughly 3,000 Indian wolves survives outside protected areas, in landscapes shared with farmers and pastoralists, making this one of the world's most challenging large carnivore conservation situations.

Indian wolves live in small family packs of 4 to 8 individuals and hunt cooperatively, specialising in pursuing blackbuck and chinkara across open country. They are intelligent, shy, and extraordinarily wary of humans, making sightings relatively rare despite their presence across much of peninsular India. The Velavadar Blackbuck National Park in Gujarat offers the best chance of seeing Indian wolves in India — packs regularly hunt the park's blackbuck herds and are occasionally seen in broad daylight during the cool winter months.

Safari tips
Best time to spot
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec

Where to spot it

Parks and forests where you have the best chance of seeing Indian Wolf in the wild.

← Previous Species
Indian Wild Ass
→ Next Species
King Cobra