Thursday, March 28, 2013

Feds target mating of dogs, rare wolves


Associated Press Wed Mar 27, 2013
 
Federal wildlife managers have been working to return the endangered Mexican gray wolf to the American Southwest for the past 15 years. Every now and then, there’s a genetic hiccup.
It happens when a wolf breeds with a domestic dog and produces a litter of hybridized pups.
While it doesn’t happen often, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service spokesman Tom Buckley said this week that hybridization is a concern. “The bottom line is it’s not a good thing, and we try not to allow that to happen,” he said.

Any mixing of Mexican gray wolves with dogs has the potential to throw a wrench in the federal government’s efforts to reintroduce the predators to Arizona and New Mexico. Having a genetically diverse — yet pure — population has been identified as one of the keys to making the effort a success, and biologists have gone to great lengths over the years to pair genetically valuable wolves and to collect semen and eggs from some of the animals for captive breeding and research.
When hybrid wolves are found in the wild, they are removed to protect the genetic pool. Wildlife managers in 2011 had to euthanize four wolf-dog pups that belonged to a female Mexican gray wolf that had been released into the Gila National Forest.

Only two other cases have been documented — in 2002 and in 2005.

But environmentalists say there’s a “genetic crisis” within the wild Mexican-wolf population and have been pushing the Fish and Wildlife Service to release some of the nearly 260 wolves in captivity. “The fact that there are hybrid animals indicates that the wolves are not finding each other and that there are not enough animals on the ground,” said Wendy Keefover of the group WildEarth Guardians.

Federal officials argued that releasing more captive wolves won’t solve the problem. They are focusing on those wolves that can diversify the genetic pool.

The Mexican-gray-wolf population stems from seven wolves that were trapped in Mexico in the late 1970s as part of the effort to save the species through captive breeding. The federal government released the first captive-bred wolves into the wild in 1998.

The most recent population count completed at the beginning of the year found at least 75 wolves in the wild. Out of the 13 packs identified, there were only a few breeding pairs.

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