ST. LOUIS — Wolf
experts from around the nation will be gathering this week to consider
how to help the critically endangered red wolf.
The
red wolf population in the wild, all in eastern North Carolina, has
dropped to about 50 from 100 in the past five years, officials at the
St. Louis Endangered Wolf Center said Tuesday. The matter took on more
urgency recently when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service suspended the
reintroduction of captive wolves into the wild until it could study the
value of the release program.
Experts
meeting Wednesday through Friday in suburban St. Louis will make
breeding and relocation recommendations, discuss population viability
and hear from government officials involved with the reintroduction
program.
Red
wolves once roamed much of the eastern third of the U.S., from the Ohio
River Valley into Missouri and as far south as Texas and Florida. The
red wolf was designated as endangered in 1967, and the Fish and Wildlife
Service began efforts to save the species.
Major
threats to red wolves are hunters who mistake them for coyotes, and the
belief they are dangerous and aggressive toward humans, said Virginia
Busch, executive director of the Endangered Wolf Center. "Educating
the public and dispelling misconceptions about 'the big bad wolf' is
vital if we are to ensure their long term viability," Busch said.
The
red wolf was declared extinct in the wild in 1980, when only 14 pure
red wolves remained to begin breeding programs, said Busch. Four pairs
of red wolves were released into North Carolina's Alligator River
National Wildlife Refuge in 1987, and remains the only place in the
world where red wolves exist in the wild.
Cindy
Dohner, southeast regional director for the Fish and Wildlife Service,
said in June that suspending reintroduction is part of "our commitment
to get the science right, rebuild trust with our neighbors in those
communities, our state partners and many stakeholders as we address
issues regarding the overall recovery of the red wolf."
The
Fish and Wildlife Service said nearly 200 red wolves exist in captive
breeding facilities. That includes four at the Endangered Wolf Center. Busch
said about 30 members of the Red Wolf Species Survival Plan will attend
the conference. They represent zoos, research centers and other
agencies from around the country. "It
is incumbent on us both to continue our efforts to sustain the
population, as well as ramp up education and public understanding about
the need to save these amazing animals," she said in a statement.
The
Endangered Wolf Center is a nonprofit founded in 1971 by zoologist
Marlin Perkins, a St. Louis native best known as the host of TV's
"Mutual of Omaha Wild Kingdom," who died in 1986.
While some wolves have been shot many are undoubtedly are the victims of heart worms. The wolves should never have been released in an area saturated with heart worms. One can not have a dog as a pet and not constantly treat them for heart worms in this area. It was actually naïve/cruel to release a canine in such area. The heart worms migrated into our area 60+ years ago. The adults are infected and the pups are born with them. It's a slow miserable death as the worm slowly clogs the heart. The wolves should have been introduced in an area with minimal exposure to the mosquitos that carry the parasites and an area over run by deer not an area where the deer are classified as poor. The destruction of the deer population is the real reason the wolves are being shot. The idea that people are scared of the big bad wolf is silly, I live here I know, the wolves, bears and coyotes are overwhelming a "poor" deer population. The combination of "poor" deer, a refuge closed to harvesting bear (and many, many bear) and now coyotes on top of the heart worms have made this area a poor choice for the wolves.
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