Tuesday, April 15, 2014
If you follow the Jackson Zoological Park's Facebook page,
you probably saw a photo that captured the attention of every Jackson
Free Press staff member last week. The zoo's red wolves Kanati and
Taladu had a litter of eight healthy pups March 30. Deputy Director Dave
Weztel said in a release that they weighed in at a little more than a
pound each.
Taladu is Cherokee for cricket, and Kanati is named for the first man and hunter in Cherokee folklore.
On
April 8, the zoo posted #TuesdayTrivia, asking people to guess which
animal just had babies. The clues were that the animal is highly
endangered, is found in the U.S., has repopulated from just 14 and is
cute. The answer, posted at 3 p.m., was, of course, the red wolf pups.
The
red wolf and the gray wolf are the only two species of the animal that
live in the U.S. Red wolves are much smaller, with a gray-black coat
that has a reddish tint. They are one of the most endangered species of
wolf in the world, with little more than 300 in the U.S., most of which
are in captivity.
The
United States Fish and Wildlife Service declared red wolves an
endangered species in 1973 and then made efforts to gather as many of
the animals as they could to repopulate in captivity. In 1980, Fish and
Wildlife Services declared the species extinct in the wild. In 1987, the
captive population was high enough to begin restoration at Alligator
River National Wildlife Refuge in North Carolina. Today, more than 200
are in captivity, and more than 100 populate the wild.
The
Endangered Species Act classifies red wolves as endangered, and the
International Union for Conservation of Nature classifies the species as
critically endangered, with more than a 50 percent chance of becoming
extinct within the next 10 years.
This new litter of pups at the zoo provides a ray of hope for further conservation of the species. "These
wolves are highly endangered, and so, there's a chance that as these
wolves are bred in captivity, they'll actually be re-released into the
wild," said Lucy Barton, Jackson Zoo public education and public
relations manager. "We're very excited to be a part of that whole
conservation process."
Jacksonians
can also help with the conservation effort for red wolves by simply
going to the zoo. Twenty-five cents of zoo admission goes toward the
patron's project of choice, from helping the zoo with its Raptor Rehab
program—where zoo veterinarians rehabilitate raptor birds such as hawks,
vultures and eagles—to donating to its green practices project, or to
the Red Wolf Coalition.
This
is the second litter for Taladu and Kanati, though the previous litter
had to be raised by zoo veterinarians in a separate enclosure due to a
disease the animals contracted. In the new litter, the wolf couple had
three boys and five girls.
For more information, visit the Jackson Zoo's website http://jacksonzoo.org/ .
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