Canis lupus 101

Saturday, July 19, 2014

NEW Zoo pups offer hope for endangered wolf species



Six red wolf pups were born two months ago at the NEW Zoo in Suamico. The zoo is working to 
restore the red wolf population by breeding in captivity and releasing the wolves back into the wild 
once they've matured. (July 18, 2014) Jim Matthews/Press-Gazette Media


Rachel Minske, Press-Gazette Media  
July 18, 2014

SUAMICO – Six red wolf pups spent Friday morning sitting snugly inside their shelters at the NEW Zoo. Just 2 months old, the young wolves occasionally poked their heads outside to look at a zoo employee who put out bowls of food and cleaned the animals' enclosure. "They're just now getting to the state where they're all over the place and spending more time awake and wrestling," said Carmen Murach, curator of animals at the NEW Zoo.

The red wolf breed is extremely endangered, Murach said. In an effort to rebuild the population, the zoo is one of many across the country breeding the animal in captivity with the hopes they may eventually be released into the wild. "We're trying to create as close and diverse to the original population as possible," she said. "We do pay a lot of attention."

In 1973, the red wolf was officially declared endangered in the wild, said Will Waddell, the red wolf species survival plan coordinator from Point Defiance Zoo in Washington state. Waddell helped coordinate the relocation of the red wolf population at zoos across the country.

By 1980, all remaining red wolves in the wild — 14 total — were captured and placed in captivity. At that point, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced the animal was extinct in the wild. For the past 24 years, the red wolf population has slowly grown as they've been bred in captivity and released into the wild, Waddell said. "In zoos, they're doing pretty well," said Waddell, who noted that 209 are in captivity and approximately 100 are in the wild. "They're stable and it's something we evaluate every year."

The NEW Zoo stepped up to help, and it acquired two adult wolves — a female named Mayo and her mate, Tamaska. Two months ago Mayo gave birth to healthy pups, Murach said. At this point in their lives, the wolf pups are similar to domestic dogs and easily worn out. In an effort to prepare them for successful release into the wild, the zoo limits human interaction and does not feed the baby animals by hand.

Although the red wolf population is growing, Waddell said the wolves are not doing well once they're released into their natural habitat. Many are often shot by people or hit by cars. Because they were captured in the wild and brought into captivity, the red wolves at the NEW Zoo are owned by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, said Lisa Mandell, deputy field supervisor for the department's Minnesota office. "Anyone who's going to take animals out of the wild for whatever reason, they're going to need authorization to use those animals in captivity, and it would normally be for recovery purposes," Mandell said.

It has not yet been decided whether the pups at the Green Bay zoo will be released back into the wild, Murach said. They may be relocated to various zoos once they're mature adults two years from now. "We're really proud of this one," Murach said of the healthy population. "These little pups are adorable and cute but also so important."

source


-ES_GPG_Red Wolf at NEW Zoo_7.18.1400124.jpg_20140718.jpg
A red wolf yawns as it naps Friday at the NEW Zoo in Suamico. The red wolf is an extremely endangered species, and the NEW Zoo has worked to bolster the population. (Photo: Evan Siegle/Press-Gazette Media)
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A Special Film from @Earthjustice

For centuries, wolves have been viewed with suspicion and hostility, based in humankind’s deep-rooted fear of the unknown and need to control the natural world.

“The Fable of the Wolf,” a new animated short film produced by Earthjustice, explores this idea, celebrating the wild nature of a deeply misunderstood species.

The film offers an abbreviated history of the relationship between wolves and people—told from the wolf’s perspective—from a time when they coexisted to an era in which people began to fear and exterminate the wolves.

The return of wolves to the northern Rocky Mountains has been called one of America’s greatest conservation stories. But wolves are facing new attacks by members of Congress who are gunning to remove Endangered Species Act protections before the species has recovered.

The film encourages viewers to “join the pack” and sound the alarm about the political threats to this species. Please help us spread the message that wolves are to be celebrated, not feared, by watching this film and sharing it with your friends.

Sincerely,

Maggie Caldwell
Press Secretary for @Earthjustice

Listen to the Howl of the Red Wolf

Eastern Wolf Pack Howling

Howling Good Sites

  • CO Div. of Wildlife/Wolf Page
  • CO Wolf & Wildlife Center
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  • Defenders of Wildlife
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  • Ethiopian Wolf Conservation
  • Field Trip Earth: Red Wolves at Alligator River
  • German Wolf Association
  • Greater Yellowstone Science Learning Center
  • Howl Colorado
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  • In the Shadow of the Wolf
  • International Wolf Center
  • Keep Wolves Listed
  • Living with Wolves
  • Medicine of the Wolf
  • Mexican Wolf Recovery Program
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  • Northeast Wolf Recovery
  • Point Defiance Zoo: Red Wolf
  • Red Wolf Coalition
  • Red Wolf Recovery Program
  • Red Wolf Sanctuary
  • Return of the Red Wolf—Tales from the Swamp
  • STOP WOLF HUNTS
  • Seacrest Wolf Preserve
  • Speak for Wolves
  • Stop Wolf Hunts
  • The Real Yellowstone Page
  • The UK Wolf Conservation Trust
  • The Wolf Center
  • The Wolves of Douglas County, Wisconsin
  • The Yellowstone Wolf Genome Project
  • Timber Wolf Info Network
  • Trap Free New Mexico
  • US Fish and Wildlife Services: Red Wolf Recovery Project
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  • Wolfiestyle's Tumblr
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Inescapably, the realization was being borne in upon my preconditioned mind that the centuries-old and universally accepted human concept of wolf character was a palpable lie... From this hour onward, I would go open-minded into the lupine world and learn to see and know the wolves, not for what they were supposed to be, but for what they actually were.
-Farley Mowat, Never Cry Wolf

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“If you look into the eyes of a wild wolf, there is something there more powerful than many humans can accept.” – Suzanne Stone

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