- Article by: JIM ADAMS , Star Tribune
- Updated: July 14, 2014
Rescued from wildfire, the pups will replace older wolves and are expected to draw visitors.
A
revived and lively litter of wolves is expected Tuesday at the
Minnesota Zoo, just weeks after being plucked from the smoldering
aftermath of an Alaskan wildfire.
Officials at the Apple Valley
zoo said the five gray wolf pups have rebounded nicely after being
abandoned by their parents during the May fire and then losing a sibling
to a porcupine attack.
Four
firefighters discovered the 2-week-old pups in their den, dehydrated
and stuck with quills. A porcupine apparently had wandered into the den
to escape the smoke and flames of the massive Funny River wildfire in
the Kenai Peninsula Wildlife Refuge.
Such
a wildfire rescue of pups is rare, according to the Alaska Department
of Fish and Game website. Officials believe the pups’ parents fled the
den because of the fire and firefighter activity in the area.
The
five survivors — three males and two females; three gray, two
light-colored — were taken to the Alaska Zoo in Anchorage on May 27,
where staff tended and bottle-fed them. One pup is named X-Ray, after
the fire crew that saved them. The others were named after the four
rescuers’ hometowns: Gannett, Hooper, Huslia and Stebbins, said
Minnesota Zoo spokesman Josh Le.
Now
eight weeks old, the pups have tripled in size and can be seen playing
on video taken at the Alaska Zoo. Visitors were invited to view wolf
feedings five times a day at the zoo, and as they grew, watched them
romp and roll outside. “So
far they are really healthy and that is why they are coming Tuesday to
the Minnesota Zoo,” Le said. “They are growing but still adorable.”
But
don’t expect to see the Alaskan canines in person until mid-August. The
pups will be in quarantine for a month while they are monitored and
blood and fecal tests are done to ensure they carry no disease or
parasites to the zoo, Le said.
The
furry five will replace the zoo’s adult pair of gray wolves,
Kaskapahtew and Wazi, who have never bred successfully, Le said. He said
the pair will be sent to another accredited zoo in the U.S., and had no
chance of being euthanized.
The
five siblings likely will boost attendance by creating the wolf pack
the zoo has long sought. They will have free run of the spacious wolf
enclosure on the Medtronic
Minnesota Trail. They will be spayed and neutered because they are not
an endangered species and the zoo avoids inbreeding, Le said.
Le said the pups will be escorted by Alaska Zoo staff on a flight donated by Delta Air Lines. Two Minnesota Zoo managers will greet the Alaskans at the Minneapolis airport.
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