Dayton Daily News

Wild canines found with red wolf link

Animal was thought to have been extinct in Texas region.

- By David Warren

Researcher­s say a DALLAS — pack of wild canines found frolicking near the beaches of the Texas Gulf Coast carry a substantia­l amount of red wolf genes, a surprising discovery because the animal was declared extinct in the wild nearly 40 years ago.

The finding has led wildlife biologists and others to develop a new understand­ing that the red wolf DNA is remarkably resilient after decades of human hunting, loss of habitat and other factors had led the animal to near decimation.

“Overall, it’s incredibly rare to rediscover animals in a region where they were thought to be extinct and it’s even more exciting to show that a piece of an endangered genome has been preserved in the wild,” said Elizabeth Heppenheim­er, a Princeton University biologist involved in the research on the pack found on Galveston Island in Texas. The work of the Princeton team was published in the scientific journal Genes. The genetic analysis found the Galveston canines appear to be a hybrid of red wolf and coyote, but Heppenheim­er cautions without additional testing, it’s difficult to label the animal.

Ron Sutherland, a North Carolina-based conservati­on scientist with the Wildlands Network, said it’s exciting to have found “this unique and fascinatin­g medium-sized wolf.”

The discovery coincides with similar DNA findings in wild canines in southweste­rn Louisiana and bolsters the hopes of conservati­onists dismayed by the dwindling number of red wolves in North Carolina that comprised the only known pack in the wild.

The red wolf, which tops out at about 80 pounds, was once common across a vast region extending from Texas to the south, into the Southeast and up into the Northeast. It was federally classified as endangered in 1967 and declared extinct in the wild in 1980. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in the 1970s captured a remnant population in Texas and Louisiana that eventually led to a successful captive breeding program. Those canines in 1986 became part of the experiment­al wild population in North Carolina.

An additional 200 red wolves live in zoos and wildlife facilities as part of captive breeding programs.

A federal judge in November sided with environmen­tal groups that argued in a lawsuit that efforts by federal authoritie­s to shrink the territory of the wild group in North Carolina were a violation of law. The judge ruled U.S. Fish and Wildlife also violated the Endangered Species Act by authorizin­g private landowners to kill the canine predators even if they weren’t threatenin­g humans, livestock or pets.

 ?? GERRY BROOME / AP 2017 ?? Researcher­s say a pack of wild canines found near the Texas Gulf Coast carry red wolf genes.
GERRY BROOME / AP 2017 Researcher­s say a pack of wild canines found near the Texas Gulf Coast carry red wolf genes.

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