USA TODAY US Edition

Only 40 red wolves are left in the wild

Once common in the Southeast, species is on edge of extinction

- Doyle Rice

Only 40 red wolves remain in the wild in the USA, and the population could go extinct within eight years, according to a report released by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

“Time is running out for red wolves,” said Collette Adkins, a biologist and senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. “We need to move fast if we’re going to keep them from disappeari­ng forever.”

Once a common sight across the entire southeaste­rn USA, the red wolf was listed as endangered in 1967 and first declared extinct in the wild in

1980, according to the Fish and Wildlife Service. An experiment­al colony of captive wolves was reintroduc­ed into eastern North Carolina in the

mid-1980s in an attempt to bring the species back to the wild.

That colony peaked at 120 to 130 wolves in 2006, then dwindled to 40.

“It is obvious that there are significan­t threats (to the experiment­al population) in eastern North Carolina, and conditions for recovery of the species are not favorable, and a self-sustainabl­e population may not be possible,” the wildlife service said.

The red wolf “is one of the most endangered mammal species on the entire planet,” said Ron Sutherland, a scientist at the non-profit conservati­on group Wildlands Network. “For comparison purposes, there are around 1,600 giant pandas, 2,000 Bengal tigers and 4,500 snow leopards left in the wild vs. only 40 red wolves.”

Human hunters and vehicle collisions are the primary reasons for the wolves’ decline, and both will continue to be the greatest threat going forward, the report said.

Another factor in the decreasing wolf population is interbreed­ing with coyotes.

Human-caused climate change will also play a role, the fish and wildlife service said. “In time, sea-level rise may limit available habitat on the Albemarle Peninsula,” the report warned.

“We’re disappoint­ed that the fiveyear status review appears to take great pains to describe the North Carolina wild population of red wolves as unsustaina­ble,” Sutherland said. The wildlife service “stopped releasing new wolves from captivity, they stopped managing coyotes, and they’ve sat back and watched as gunshot mortality shredded the red wolf population.”

Many landowners and hunters oppose the plan to continue the wild wolf population, North Carolina’s top wildlife official, Gordon Myers, told The Washington Post, which suggests they believe it’s time to let red wolves disappear, at least from his state.

 ?? GERRY BROOME/AP ?? A 7-week-old red wolf pup touches noses with its mother at the Museum of Life and Science in Durham, N.C., on June 13.
GERRY BROOME/AP A 7-week-old red wolf pup touches noses with its mother at the Museum of Life and Science in Durham, N.C., on June 13.

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