For Immediate Release, April 22, 2022
Contact: |
Perrin de Jong, (828) 252-4646, perrin@biologicaldiversity.org |
First Red Wolf Pups Born in Wild Since 2018, Raising Hope for Brighter Future for Species
ALBERMARLE, N.C.— For the first time in four years, a litter of pups has been born into eastern North Carolina’s struggling population of wild red wolves. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Red Wolf Recovery Program staff confirmed this week that six pups were born to a wild red wolf pair in Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge. The Service announced late Thursday night that the new litter includes four females and two male pups.
This significant news for the near-extinct species comes amid a renewed recovery effort by the Service. The agency had largely abandoned its recovery efforts for the world’s rarest canine predator since 2015, but officials announced in February that they were committing significant resources to revitalize the program and ensure a full recovery for the species in the wild.
“There’s a clear cause-and-effect relationship between the Service’s recovery efforts and the survival and reproduction of red wolves in the wild,” said Perrin de Jong, North Carolina staff attorney at the Center. “It’s tremendously encouraging to see the agency trying to protect and recover wild red wolves again. My heart is filled with hope at the sight of a new generation of red wolves taking their rightful place on the landscape.”
The parents of this newborn litter were brought together as a result of the Service’s renewed efforts to encourage the reproductive success of red wolves in the wild. The agency’s matchmaking efforts met with success when the adult wolves paired, established their territory, and mated.
The agency’s revitalized red wolf recovery efforts include the following initiatives:
Since its February announcement, the Service has released a total of seven captive-bred red wolves into the wild population, including a pack of two adults and three pups.
“The Service’s efforts this year represent an encouraging increase in recovery activity across this species’ recovery area, and we’re beginning to see the results,” said de Jong. “Now we need the Service to keep at it, so that red wolves not only have a future in eastern North Carolina, but across their historical range in the Southeast.”
Red wolves were once abundant across the Southeast, but the species is now the most endangered canid in the world. Today, only 20 known red wolves remain in the wild, surviving in five sparsely populated counties in eastern North Carolina.
In 2020 and 2021, seven adult red wolves were released into the wild population. In 2021 alone, seven red wolves were confirmed killed by vehicle strikes, gunshots and unknown causes. Gunshots are the leading cause of death for wild red wolves, followed by vehicle strikes.
Twenty-thousand acres of prime habitat across five Southeastern states have been identified as potential reintroduction sites for the species.
The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1.7 million members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.