The dire wolf was an important large, late Pleistocene predator in North an
d South America, well adapted to preying on megaherbivores. Geographically
widespread, Canis dirus is reported from 136 localities in North America fr
om Alberta, Canada, southward and from three localities in South America (M
uaco, Venezuela; Talara, Peru; and Tarija, Bolivia). The species lived in a
variety of environments, from forested mountains to open grasslands and pl
ains ranging in elevation from sea level to 2255 m (7400 feet). Canis dirus
is assigned to the Rancholabrean land mammal age of North America and the
Lujanian land mammal age of South America and was among the many large carn
ivores and megaherbivores that became extinct in North and South America ne
ar the end of the Pleistocene Epoch.