vs gray wolf

Chrysochromulina campanulifera compared with Canis lupus

Key Differences

  • is Not Evaluated while gray wolf is Critically Endangered.

Taxonomic Classification

Rank gray wolf
Kingdom Chromista (色藻界) Animalia (动物界)
Phylum Haptophyta (定鞭藻門) Chordata (脊索动物门)
Class Prymnesiophyceae (普林藻纲) Mammalia (哺乳動物)
Order Prymnesiales (定鞭金藻目) Carnivora (食肉目)
Family Chrysochromulinaceae Canidae (Dogs & Wolves)
Genus Chrysochromulina Canis (Dogs & Wolves)
Species Chrysochromulina campanulifera Canis lupus

Conservation Status

NE — Not Evaluated

gray wolf

CR — Critically Endangered

Population: ~300.0K

Trend: Stable →

Physical Characteristics

Attribute gray wolf
Diet Carnivore
Average Lifespan 13 years
Average Length 1.6 m
Average Weight 45.0 kg

Habitat & Geographic Range

Habitat

Native to Europe, inhabiting ecosystems characteristic of the region.

Range

Distributed across Norway and Sweden.

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.

Chrysochromulina campanulifera is a marine haptophyte microalga belonging to the genus Chrysochromulina within the family Chrysochromulinaceae, class Prymnesiophyceae. The species epithet campanulifera, meaning bell-bearing, references a distinctive morphological feature of the cell — likely a bell-shaped scale or structural component visible under electron microscopy. This feature exemplifies how fine-scale ultrastructural characters drive species discrimination within Chrysochromulina, a genus currently containing more than fifty described species. C. campanulifera inhabits coastal marine waters and has been documented from Norwegian and Swedish coastal regions, environments that have yielded a disproportionate number of haptophyte species descriptions due to focused Scandinavian phycological research programs from the 1950s onward. The species is a nanoplankton organism — typically two to twenty micrometers in diameter — that participates in primary production and marine carbon cycling. Like other haptophytes, it possesses chloroplasts containing chlorophylls a and c along with carotenoid accessory pigments that give the cells their characteristic golden-brown coloration. The coiling haptonema, a defining feature of the genus, distinguishes Chrysochromulina from related genera such as Prymnesium and Phaeocystis. C. campanulifera has not been formally assessed under IUCN criteria and retains a conservation status of Not Evaluated. Research on this and related species informs understanding of nanoplankton diversity, marine biogeography, and the ecological dynamics of temperate and boreal coastal oceans.

gray wolf

灰狼是分布最广的野生犬科动物,分布范围从北美横跨欧亚大陆,栖息于冻原、森林和草原等多种生境。高度社会化的动物,以由占优势的繁殖对领导的家族群体生活。作为关键捕食者,狼调节猎物种群并深刻影响生态系统结构,黄石公园的重引入项目对此有充分证明。曾遭到严重迫害,但目前许多地区的种群正在恢复。

Shared Countries

Both species can be found in 2 countries:

Nature FYI Family

Explore more of the natural world across our sister sites.

Part of the Nature FYI family — FYIPedia