In this Oct. 6, 2011 photo, Alawa, a Rocky Mountain wolf, looks though a
fence at the Wolf Conservation Center in South Salem, N.Y. The Wolf
Conservation Center in South Salem is raising and breeding endangered
Mexican and red wolves. The animals roam in large pens on the 27-acre
property, eating roadkill and whatever they catch. The center is an
important part of the effort to return wolves to the wild in North
Carolina, Arizona and New Mexico. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)
In this Oct. 6, 2011 photo, Alawa, a Rocky Mountain wolf, walks through
the grass at the Wolf Conservation Center in South Salem, N.Y. The Wolf
Conservation Center is raising and breeding endangered Mexican and red
wolves. The animals roam in large pens on the 27-acre property, eating
roadkill and whatever they catch. The center is an important part of the
effort to return wolves to the wild in North Carolina, Arizona and New
Mexico. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)
In this Oct. 6, 2011 photo, a Mexican wolf sits on the ground at the
Wolf Conservation Center in South Salem, N.Y. The Wolf Conservation
Center is raising and breeding endangered Mexican and red wolves. The
animals roam in large pens on the 27-acre property, eating roadkill and
whatever they catch. The center is an important part of the effort to
return wolves to the wild in North Carolina, Arizona and New Mexico. (AP
Photo/Seth Wenig)
In this Oct. 6, 2011 photo, a breeding pair of Mexican wolves look
around their enclosure at the Wolf Conservation Center in South Salem,
N.Y. The Wolf Conservation Center is raising and breeding endangered
Mexican and red wolves. The animals roam in large pens on the 27-acre
property, eating roadkill and whatever they catch. The center is an
important part of the effort to return wolves to the wild in North
Carolina, Arizona and New Mexico. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)
In this Oct. 6, 2011 photo, red wolves walk around their enclosure at
the Wolf Conservation Center in South Salem, N.Y. The Wolf Conservation
Center is raising and breeding endangered Mexican and red wolves. The
animals roam in large pens on the 27-acre property, eating roadkill and
whatever they catch. The center is an important part of the effort to
return wolves to the wild in North Carolina, Arizona and New Mexico. (AP
Photo/Seth Wenig)
In this Oct. 6, 2011 photo, a red wolf runs at the Wolf Conservation
Center in South Salem, N.Y. The Wolf Conservation Center is raising and
breeding endangered Mexican and red wolves. The animals roam in large
pens on the 27-acre property, eating roadkill and whatever they catch.
The center is an important part of the effort to return wolves to the
wild in North Carolina, Arizona and New Mexico. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)
SOUTH SALEM, N.Y. (AP) — She seemed perfectly normal, so it was
surprising and a little scary when Maggie Howell suddenly let loose with
a long, loud, screechy yell that sounded unlike anything human.
Then
came the responses. A yip, a bark, and then howl after howl, cascading
down the wooded hill from two dozen or so unseen animals at the Wolf
Conservation Center in the New York City suburbs.
"Beautiful, isn't it?" said Howell, 39, the wolf center's managing director.
The chorus went on for more than a minute, a strange and unfamiliar sound within 45 miles of midtown Manhattan.
The
wolf center is a key component in the national effort to return
endangered wolves to the wild. In partnership with the U.S. Fish &
Wildlife Service, the 27-acre center is raising and breeding Mexican and
red wolves in large enclosures, letting them eat roadkill and whatever
they catch and limiting their contact with humans.
The hope is
that they or their progeny can one day be released into the wild in
North Carolina or along the Arizona-New Mexico border and help save
animals that were nearly wiped out by man through hunting, poisoning and
loss of habitat.
There are 53 zoos and nature centers in the
Mexican wolf program and 42 in the red wolf program, but the Wolf
Conservation Center is among the more valuable, officials said.
"They
keep several animals as wild as they can, they participate in breeding,
and they can get the joy of fostering animals into the wild," said
David Rabon, who is based in Mateo, N.C., as national coordinator of the
red wolf recovery program.
"Being able to do what the WCC is
doing so close to a major metropolis is pretty remarkable," said Peter
Siminski, coordinator of the Mexican wolf program based in Palm Desert,
Calif.
Of the 10 pairs of wolves chosen to breed for the Mexican
wolf program this coming winter, two pairs are at the WCC. The red wolf
program has also designated two of the center's pairs for breeding.
So
there's great anticipation on the center's wooded grounds in South
Salem, where almost all of the space is taken up by one- to three-acre
wolf pens, each with a pair or family.
During a recent visit, a
pair of greyish Mexican wolves, barely visible in the dense foliage in
their 1-acre pen, kept a wary eye on the humans at the fence. In a
neighboring enclosure, a family of red wolves, shorter, ruddier and with
pointed ears, was even more withdrawn. But suddenly all the reds —
parents followed by 17-month-old pups — raced through the dappled
sunlight in a clearing.
"It's great to see them like this," Howell said.
None
of the red and Mexican wolves are given names, part of the effort to
limit their human contact. Their designations are letter-and-number
combinations like F1397 and M1483, with the letters designating their
sex.
The wolf center also plays a key role in combatting the
notion of wolves as grandmother-gobbling monsters or mindless
sheep-killers. Three socialized "ambassador" wolves, not involved in the
back-to-the-wild task, help educate schoolchildren and others about the
animals' nature and history. The wolf center also hosts lectures,
movies and "howls," tours that include getting the wolves to sing.
The
newest ambassador wolves are juveniles — black Zephyr and tawny Alawa,
both Canadian grey wolves. They loped eagerly to a fence when humans
approached and tugged at their toys, which included a teddy bear and
part of a bison skull.
The third ambassador, a regal arctic grey
wolf named Atka, rested in a separate pen. He'd been out the previous
night — visiting an upstate high school.
The wolf center's
education aspect has suffered some recent setbacks. Three of its
longtime ambassador wolves died within the last year and a half of
cancer or old age.
Then in July, the wolf center lost a court case
and had to give up a donation of land worth nearly $1.5 million. The
case pitted two conservation groups against each other: the Westchester
Land Trust claimed that erecting wolf enclosures would violate an
existing conservation easement on the land.
The lawsuit spoiled
plans to move the educational aspects of the wolf center to the new
acreage a couple of miles away. Instead, the wolf center is hoping to
buy some of the land it's currently leasing from pianist Helene Grimaud
and photographer J. Henry Fair, who together founded the wolf center in
1999.
Meanwhile, staffers are hoping to see wolf mating and wolf pups in 2012.
"Hopefully,
with four breeding pairs, we'll celebrate at least one new litter, but
this is captivity and these are arranged marriages, so you just don't
know," Howell said.
The Mexican wolf was all but extinct in the wild in the 1980s.
"To
save the subspecies, the Fish and Wildlife Service took a few animals
from the wild and established a captive breeding program," Siminski
said.
"In 1998, wolves from the program were released on the
Arizona-New Mexico border. To maintain genetic diversity, the 50 or so
wolves in the wild are restocked from pups born to the 300 wolves kept
in captivity.
"Breeding pairs are selected carefully, Siminski said.
"They have to know what wild prey is, they need to fear people, and they need to be good social wolves," he said.
Pups
born into the Mexican wolf program would likely be sent to a prerelease
facility, paired with opposite-sex wolves and allowed to raise pups
themselves before being sent out into the wild.
The red wolf story
is similar. In 1970, on the brink of extinction, 14 were gathered up
for a captive breeding program that led to a release in eastern North
Carolina in the 1980s. There are about 115 wolves there, and about 180
in captivity.
The red wolf program uses a technique called
fostering-in. Rabon said that if a wolf in captivity and a wolf in the
wild have litters within a few days of each other, and the captive
litter is big enough, pups from the captive litter can be rushed down to
North Carolina and placed in the wild wolf's den.
"It has to be
done before the eyes open," Rabon said. "We have found that mothers will
take them in and we have no evidence of harm to the birth mother or the
rest of her litter."
That could mean that next spring, a wolf born in metropolitan New York will be in the care of a wild pack in North Carolina.
"It would be amazing to celebrate pups," Howell said, "and then say, 'Bye-bye, have fun, do what you need to do out there.'"
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