East Bay Times

U.S. commits to releasing more endangered red wolves into wild

- By Ben Finley

The U.S. government will settle a lawsuit with conservati­on groups and commit to releasing more endangered red wolves into the wilds of North Carolina, where nearly three dozen of the species are believed to still run free.

The conservati­on groups sued the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 2020 after it stopped releasing captive-bred wolves. Eastern North Carolina is the only place in the world where they roam wild outside of zoos and refuges.

The Southern Environmen­tal Law Center filed the lawsuit on behalf of the Red Wolf Coalition, Defenders of Wildlife and the Animal Welfare Institute. A settlement agreement was reached Wednesday, according to documents filed in U.S. District Court in North Carolina.

“For 25 years, North Carolina was home to one of the most successful predator reintroduc­tions in the world,” Ramona McGee, a Southern Environmen­tal Law Center attorney, said in a statement. “This settlement puts us on a path to restoring the red wolf to its rightful place as a celebrated success story.”

Red wolves once occupied much of the Eastern U.S. but were driven to near extinction by trapping,

hunting and habitat loss before they were reintroduc­ed to North Carolina in 1987. Their range is limited to five counties. Scientists at zoos and other sites have maintained a captive population of nearly 300 wolves in recent years.

After red wolves were reintroduc­ed, the state's wild population grew beyond 100 and remained stable through 2012.

Wolf numbers were bolstered by releases of captive-born pups and sterilizat­ion of coyotes that competed for space. But those approaches were halted in 2015 amid pressure from conservati­ve politician­s and landowners who deemed wolves a nuisance.

Red wolves are in an area dominated by farms and private land. At least 96 died of gunshot wounds

over the decades.

Some landowners have said that the wolves have made it harder to fight coyotes. A federal judge in 2014 banned night hunting of coyotes in red wolf territory because the canines are easily mixed up.

By the time conservati­on groups filed their 2020 lawsuit, they said there could be as few as seven red wolves living in the wild. The groups argued that federal wildlife officials violated the Endangered Species Act through actions that included halting the release of captive-bred wolves in 2015.

The lawsuit prompted a federal judge in 2021 to order the Fish and Wildlife Service to produce a plan to bolster the wild wolves' numbers as the lawsuit continued.

 ?? GERRY BROOME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A female red wolf emerges from her den sheltering newborn pups at the Museum of Life and Science in Durham, N.C., in 2019.
GERRY BROOME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A female red wolf emerges from her den sheltering newborn pups at the Museum of Life and Science in Durham, N.C., in 2019.

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