Mexican wolf breeding programme gets boost from zoo

21 July 2021, 11:06

Mexico Wolves
Mexico Wolves. Picture: PA

Five pups born in Mexico City should eventually be reintroduced to the wild.

Five grey wolf pups born at Mexico City’s Chapultepec Zoo are giving a boost to efforts to broaden the endangered species’ genetic diversity amid continuing efforts to reintroduce the animals to the wild decades after they were reduced to captive populations.

The pups’ father, Rhi, alerts them every midday to the delivery of breakfast, in the form of chicken and quail meat brought by zookeeper Jorge Gutiérrez, 58.

Mr Gutiérrez has cared for Rhi since he was born, and is now proud to see he has formed a pack with the pups’ mother, Seje.

“It’s marvellous. What I am experiencing is something unique,” says Mr Gutiérrez.

Mexico Wolves
A Mexican Wolf pup lounges in an enclosure at the Chapultepec Zoo in Mexico City(Fernando Llano/AP)

He watches as the five wolf pups stumble out of their den to eat. The three males and two females were born in early April.

They are part of a four-decade, binational programme between the United States and Mexico to breed the grey wolves in captivity and release them back into the wild.

Even the “endangered” classification is progress for the Mexican wolf; two years ago, given the success of the breeding programme, Mexican authorities were able to move the subspecies up from its previous “probably extinct in the wild” classification.

For more than two decades, the effort to return Mexican grey wolves to the wild in the south-west US has been fraught with conflict.

Mexico Wolves
A Mexican wolf feeds her pups at Chapultepec Zoo (Fernando Llano/AP)

Ranchers have complained about the challenges of having to scare away the wolves to keep their cattle from being eaten. Many have said their livelihoods and rural way of life are at stake.Environmentalists argue that wolf reintroduction has stumbled as a result of illegal killings and management decisions they contend are rooted in the US Fish and Wildlife Service’s attempt to accommodate ranchers and the region’s year-round cattle calving season.

North America’s rarest subspecies of grey wolf, the Mexican grey wolf, was listed as endangered in 1976 after being hunted, trapped and poisoned to the brink of extinction.

From the 1960s to the 1980s, seven grey wolves — believed to be the last of their kind — were captured and the captive breeding programme began.

Wolves started being released in the late 90s. The wild population has nearly doubled over the past five years, with the latest annual census finding about 186 Mexican wolves in the wild in New Mexico and Arizona.

Isle Royale Wolves
A four-year-old female grey wolf is released into the wild in 2006 (National Park Service via AP)

In northern Mexico, the other part of the wolves’ historic range, reintroduction initially stumbled.

An effort to reintroduce them to the wild in the border state of Sonora in 2011 ended in tragedy when all five wolves were poisoned. It was not clear by whom.

Another release was carried out in 2012 in the state of Chihuahua, and those wolves now number around 40, most born in the wild.

Mexico is now studying other areas for possible releases.

Fernando Gual, a veterinarian who serves as director of Mexico City’s zoos, notes that the Chapultepec Zoo also has a sperm and egg bank that provides backup for genetic material.

But the best guarantees are animals such as Seje, who holds out a piece of meat with her mouth to show the pups how to eat.

“This is our jewel,” Mr Gual says. “Every litter of pups is hope for the life of this species.”

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

A firefighter is silhouetted in front of a burning structure

Huge wildfires kill two and destroy 1,000 structures in Los Angeles

Israel Palestinians

Israeli troops recover remains of hostage and check identity of second body

A resident of a care home is evacuated as the Eaton Fire approaches

Thousands flee as wildfires burn out of control in Los Angeles

Russia Ukraine War Finland

Russian missile attack on Ukrainian city kills 13 and injures dozens

Wildfires have ripped through LA.

First deaths confirmed in 'unprecedented' LA wildfires as authorities warn the 'worst is yet to come'

Youssef and Hamza Ziyadnye have been found dead, according to their family

Bodies of father and son Israeli hostages found in Gaza, family says

Cecilia Sala

Italian journalist returns to Rome after being freed by Iran

Wildfires rage around Los Angeles

Firefighters say LA wildfires can't be stopped as 30,000 people evacuated and Malibu next in firing line

Austria’s Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenberg

Austrian Foreign Minister Schallenberg to serve as country’s interim leader

Donald Trump speaks at a microphone

Trump asks US Supreme Court to block sentencing in hush money case

Demonstrators on opposing sides of the issue in Seoul

South Korean President’s lawyers slam detention efforts amid warnings of clash

Jean-Marie Le Pen

National Rally leader Marine Le Pen pays tribute to father

The actor takes part in a police press conference

Chinese actor trafficked to Myanmar to work in scam, Thai police say

Hacker with a hood behind graphic showing and binary code

Japan links Chinese hackers MirrorFace to dozens of cyber attacks

Firefighters and rescuers work at the industrial site

Ukraine claims strike on key military fuel depot deep inside Russia

Hadi Nazari found by hikers.

Moment hiker found after 13 days lost in Australian wilderness after surviving on just two granola bars