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Inside the Wolves lair: Six Endangered Wolf Pups Born

“Lair Cam” Gives the World Rare Glimpse Into the Birth of Iconic Species"  Click here to watch video

Six Mexican gray wolf pups have been born at the renowned Endangered Wolf Center outside St. Louis, MO. and, for the first time, viewers around the world will be able to follow the rarely seen first weeks of the wolves’ family life online at www.endangeredwolfcenter.org or on Facebook

The pups born May 1 are the second litter born to parents Perkins and Abby who had their first litter last year. The pups, five females and one male, are one of only four litters to be born in 2011 and their very existence has national and international implications for this endangered species.

“To be able to broadcast streaming video of these endangered wolf pups and their adult parents is an amazing feat we have never tried before,” said Ralph Pfremmer, Board Chairman of the EWC. “This will give everyone an opportunity to see these remarkable keystone predators inside the wolves’ lair.”

Pfremmer remarked that recent online, live video of bald eagle chicks and even common domestic dogs have been Internet sensations visited by millions of viewers.

“We hope the public has that same interest in these very rare wolves because we need to find significant donations to raise them and many of our other wolves so many can be returned to the wild.”

Critically endangered, only 50 Mexican gray wolves—often referred to as “El Lobos”—are living outside captivity in New Mexico and Arizona. The Endangered Wolf Center has been the birth site for 170 Mexican grays. At least one alpha member of each existing wild pack can trace its ancestry directly to the Endangered Wolf Center which has been called “the cornerstone of the Mexican gray wolf program” by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service.

Hunted, trapped and poisoned for more than a century by ranchers and the expanding population in the western states, the Mexican gray had been nearly eliminated from the planet. Only the critical and painstaking work of the EWC and a handful of similar captive breeding centers have begun the difficult process of bringing the species back from the brink over the past 29 years. The Mexican gray was designated an endangered species in 1976, and was considered extinct in the wild until their reintroduction in 1998 into Arizona and New Mexico.

The pups mother, Abby, was born in 2004 into a large litter of pups. She was injured at six months jumping onto a den roof and later removed from her pack. Proud wolf father Perkins, a year younger than Abby, was from the first successful artificially inseminated litter of Mexican gray wolves to be born in captivity and was partially hand-raised.

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