ROYAL
OAK, Mich. — A $1.4 million wolf habitat that opened Monday at the
Detroit Zoo includes grassy hills and meadows, trees, a stream and pond,
wolf dens and elevated rock outcroppings from which the wolves can
survey their surroundings.
The
2-acre "Cotton Family Wolf Wilderness" is located in the southwest
corner of the zoo in the Detroit suburb of Royal Oak. Events are taking
place Monday to mark the opening of the sanctuary, which also allows the
wolves to keep an eye on zoo visitors. "Our
goal is to provide the wolves with a wonderful home and also to educate
our guests about these ... predators and their importance to Michigan's
ecology," Ron Kagan, Detroit Zoological Society executive director and
CEO, said in a statement.
The
family of Shery and David Cotton donated $500,000 toward the
development of the habitat, which is the new home of two gray wolves —
7-year-old female Waziyata and 5-year-old male Kaskapahtew. The
Canadian-born wolves arrived from the Minnesota Zoo earlier this year.
Visitors
named "Wolf" or featuring variations of the word can roam free at the
Detroit Zoo.
Admission is free to anyone with valid photo identification
that shows a first, middle or last name containing "wolf" in some form.
That includes "Wulff," ''Wulfmeier" and "Wolfe."
In
conjunction with the opening, a National Geographic photo exhibition
titled "The Hidden Life of Wolves" will be displayed through Oct. 24.
The traveling exhibition includes 21 images by filmmakers Jim and Jamie
Dutcher, who observed wolves for six years.
The
collection of photographs is intended to dispel myths about wolves and
educate visitors about the importance of protecting them. "We've
all heard stories of the 'big, bad wolf', but that reputation is
undeserved," Kagan said. "Wolves are close cousins to man's best friend
and, as such, are highly intelligent, social creatures."
The photo exhibit is free with zoo admission.
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