Date: December 11, 2018
Source: Michigan Technological University
The
American red wolf is one of United States' greatest wildlife conservation
stories. Red wolves were on the brink of extinction along the American Gulf
Coast during the late 1970s when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS)
made a bold decision to purposely remove all remaining red wolves from the
wild.
But over
the past few years the wild population is once again dwindling (from about 130
individuals in the wild to a mere 30) amongst political controversy and
pressure from a number of landowners to be able to shoot the wolves on their
land.
In
addition to the wild population, there are approximately 200 red wolves in
captivity.
The entire
red wolf population descends from 14 individual animals, of which only 12 are
genetically represented.
"Our
discovery that red wolf genes have persisted in Texas -- after being declared
extinct in the wild -- was very surprising," said Brzeski, assistant
professor in the School of Forest Resources and Environmental Science. "It
introduces both positive opportunities for additional conservation action and
difficult policy challenges."
Brzeski
and her coauthors published their findings, "Rediscovery of Red Wolf Ghost
Alleles in a Canid Population Along the American Gulf Coast" Dec. 10, 2018
in the journal Genes.
The
researchers obtained tissue samples from two roadkill canids on Galveston
Island and conducted analyses with genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism
and mitochondrial DNA from 60 animals that represented all potential sources of
ancestry for the Galveston Island canids: coyotes, red wolves and gray wolves.
Brzeski and others found that the Galveston Island canids have both red wolf
and coyote alleles, likely related to species interbreeding during the 1970s as
coyote populations expanded across North America.
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