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Gray wolf taken in Kentucky

Started by KySongDog, August 17, 2013, 12:21:52 PM

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KySongDog


Federal officials confirm gray wolf taken in Kentucky

"Frankfort, KY. - Federal officials recently confirmed that an animal taken by a hunter near Munfordville in Hart County on March 16 is a gray wolf.

A DNA analysis performed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Wildlife Research Center in Colorado determined the 73-pound animal was a federally endangered gray wolf with a genetic makeup resembling wolves native to the Great Lakes Region. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Forensics Laboratory in Oregon confirmed the finding.

How the wolf found its way to a Munfordville hay ridge at daybreak in March remains a mystery. Wolves have been gone from the state since the mid-1800s.

Great Lakes Region wolf biologists said the animal's dental characteristics - a large amount of plaque on its teeth - suggest it may have spent some time in captivity. A largely carnivorous diet requiring the crushing of bone as they eat produces much less plaque on the teeth of wild wolves.

Hart County resident James Troyer took the animal with a shot from 100 yards away while predator hunting on his family's farm. Troyer, 31, said he had taken a coyote off the property just two weeks earlier.

But when he approached the downed animal he noticed it was much larger. "I was like - wow - that thing was big!" he recalled. "It looked like a wolf, but who is going to believe I shot a wolf?"

Because a free-ranging wolf has not been seen in the state for more than a century, biologists were skeptical at first. However, wildlife officials were aware that a few radio-collared northern wolves have wandered as far south as Missouri in the past decade.

Wolves resemble coyotes, except they are much larger. From a distance, the size difference is difficult to determine.

Troyer convinced Kevin Raymond, a wildlife biologist for the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources, to look at the animal. Once Raymond saw the animal was twice the size of a coyote, he contacted furbearer biologist Laura Patton, who submitted samples to federal officials for DNA testing.

Because state and federal laws prohibit the possession, importation into Kentucky or hunting of gray wolves, federal officials took possession of the pelt. Since this is the first free-ranging gray wolf documented in Kentucky's modern history, federal or state charges are not expected because there were no prior biological expectations for any hunter to encounter a wolf. "

http://fw.ky.gov/app/news/newsdetail.aspx?id=1334

nailbender

  Government by fools. :doh2: When in doubt confiscate.

Frogman

Jon and I saw some pretty big tracks in LBL last year!?!?  I think I posted some pictures of them.

Jim
You can't kill 'em from the recliner!!

JohnP

Quote from: nailbender on August 17, 2013, 11:41:05 PM
  Government by fools. :doh2: When in doubt confiscate.

The government is not the fool, they know exactly what they are doing.  We are the fools for letting them get involved in every aspect of our life.
When they come for mine they better bring theirs

Carolina Coyote

Right on Mr John, You my friend have it figured out. cc

FinsnFur

I just had Deja Vue :huh: :whew:

We've had wolves in Wisconsin for a long long time....  But the DNR flat out denied their presence. Every wolf that got shot was called a hybrid coyote :laf:
Two years later we got an open season of Wolves. 
DUH!  :alscalls:
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