The Star Malaysia

Eight wolf cubs the star attraction at Mexico City zoo

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Mexico city: Eight Mexican wolf cubs have delighted conservati­onists fretting over the endangered species once common along the US-Mexico border.

Of course, they are really cute: with not-quite-pointy ears, spindly legs, brown and black fur coats and hazel eyes.

Normally, litters of this kind of wolf – Canis lupus baileyi – max out at four.

So, this is the biggest litter born in a Mexico City zoo since a US-Mexican programme to boost the population of the species began in the 1980s, the Environmen­t Ministry said.

They were born at Los Coyotes Zoo in Mexico City in April and viewed by AFP on Tuesday.

The cubs were born inside a tunnel-like den with no human witnesses in a wooded area of the zoo, boosting their family from nine to 17 members. The litter comprised six males and two females.

The mother, named Pearl, took refuge in the den a week before giving birth, while father Yoltic protected them and provided food with help from his seven firstborn offspring, which are a year old.

“When we saw Pearl outside and skinnier, we knew they had been born,” said Felipe Flores, caretaker of the wolf family for the past two years.

The birth was not filmed so as to make it as natural as possible and experts hope to release them into the wild some day.

Flores described the young wolves as early achievers.

“They came out of the den after three-and-a-half weeks.

“The smallest ones attract the most attention because they are the most playful and adventurou­s,” he said while standing outside the 3,700sq m wolf enclosure, which is not open to the public.

The Mexican wolf is the smallest sub-species in North America. It is endangered partly because of poaching and habitat loss, but mainly due to systematic killing of the animals out of the belief that they carry rabies and attack livestock.

“There are only 350 of them in the world. That’s all,” said Juan Manuel Lechuga, who works for the zoo directorat­e of the Mexico City government.

City authoritie­s let people vote online to choose indigenous names for the cubs. They include Arihue (has a soul), Game (I love her), Muchari (little kid), Bimori (mist) and Kanimi (happy).

 ?? — AFP ?? Wild miracle: Three of the Mexican wolf clubs at the Los Coyotes Zoo in Mexico City.
— AFP Wild miracle: Three of the Mexican wolf clubs at the Los Coyotes Zoo in Mexico City.

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