Common Water-Nymph vs gray wolf

Najas guadalupensis compared with Canis lupus

Key Differences

  • Common Water-Nymph is Not Evaluated while gray wolf is Critically Endangered.

Taxonomic Classification

Rank Common Water-Nymph gray wolf
Kingdom Plantae (tumbuhan) Animalia (hewan)
Phylum Magnoliophyta (Flowering Plants) Chordata (Chordates)
Class Liliopsida (Monocots) Mammalia (mamalia)
Order Alismatales (Alismatales) Carnivora (Carnivorans)
Family Hydrocharitaceae Canidae (Dogs & Wolves)
Genus Najas Canis (Dogs & Wolves)
Species Najas guadalupensis Canis lupus

Conservation Status

Common Water-Nymph

NE — Not Evaluated

gray wolf

CR — Critically Endangered

Population: ~300.0K

Trend: Stable →

Physical Characteristics

Attribute Common Water-Nymph gray wolf
Diet Carnivore
Average Lifespan 13 years
Average Length 1.6 m
Average Weight 45.0 kg

Habitat & Geographic Range

Common Water-Nymph

Habitat

Typically found in grasslands, wetlands, forests, and cultivated landscapes.

Range

Widely distributed across Asia (Israel, Taiwan), Europe (4 countries), North America (4 countries), and South America (Brazil, Colombia).

gray wolf

Habitat

Found across multiple habitat types including tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests, deserts and xeric shrublands, and tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests, among 13 distinct biome types. Populations are also found in montane and highland environments at higher elevations.

Range

Widely distributed across Africa (Seychelles), Asia (Japan), Europe (5 countries), North America (7 countries), Oceania and the Pacific (Marshall Islands, Vanuatu), and South America (5 countries). Currently classified as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List, this species faces significant conservation challenges across its range.

Common Water-Nymph

<em>Najas guadalupensis</em>, commonly known as the common water nymph or southern naiad, is a submerged aquatic plant in the family Hydrocharitaceae. Its conservation status is listed as Not Evaluated by the IUCN. The species has an extensive distribution spanning Asia, Europe, and the Americas, where it inhabits a wide range of lentic and lotic freshwater environments including ponds, lakes, slow streams, and irrigation channels. It typically grows fully submerged, rooting in sandy or muddy substrates in water ranging from shallow margins to depths exceeding two meters. The plant is slender and branching, with narrow, finely toothed leaves arranged oppositely or in whorls along the stem. <em>Najas guadalupensis</em> is adapted to a range of water quality conditions and can persist in turbid, nutrient-enriched environments where other aquatic macrophytes cannot. It typically reproduces through both seed and fragmentation, with stem fragments readily establishing new colonies. Pollination occurs underwater, with pollen dispersed directly through the water column. Biological traits including average lifespan, stem length, and mass remain poorly documented in standardized databases. Ecologically, common water nymph provides important submerged habitat structure for fish, invertebrates, and waterfowl, offering spawning substrate, foraging areas, and refuge from predators in the diverse freshwater systems it occupies throughout its broad geographic range.

gray wolf

The most widely distributed wild canid, gray wolves range from North America across Eurasia in diverse habitats including tundra, forests, and grasslands. Highly social animals living in family packs led by a dominant breeding pair. As keystone predators, wolves regulate prey populations and profoundly shape ecosystem structure, as demonstrated by their reintroduction in Yellowstone. Once heavily persecuted, populations are recovering in many regions.

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