Toronto Star

Escaped wolf found dead in B.C., one still missing

-

ALDERGROVE, B.C. One of the wolves that escaped its enclosure at the Greater Vancouver Zoo this week has been found dead on a roadside, and a second wolf is still missing, the zoo’s deputy general manager said Thursday.

Menita Prasad said both the zoo’s perimeter fence and the grey wolf enclosure were deliberate­ly “compromise­d” early Tuesday, allowing the zoo’s nine adult wolves to escape while five cubs stayed inside the enclosure. All but two of the adults were contained within the zoo’s property, she said.

The zoo in Aldergrove, B.C., has been shut for three days as workers and conservati­on officers searched for the wolves, while Langley RCMP investigat­e the incident as a suspected case of unlawful entry and vandalism.

The fences had been cut, Prasad said.

An earlier statement from the zoo said the escape was “suspicious, and believed to be due to malicious intent.”

Searchers were “heartbroke­n” to find a three-year-old female wolf, Chia, dead Thursday morning, Prasad told a press conference through tears. It’s presumed Chia was hit by a car, she said.

A one-year-old female wolf named Tempest is still missing and believed to be in the vicinity of the zoo, Prasad said, adding that the animal, which was born at the facility, has a slim chance of surviving in the wild.

“As a result of this senseless act, our wolf pack has lost two family members,” Prasad said. “We watched these wolves grow up. We consider the animals at the zoo a part of our family.”

She said the “search and rescue operation” would continue and is asking for the public’s help “to reunite Tempest with her family.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada