Technically no. I was doing research at the Anahuac NWR and San Bernard NWR in
the mid-70s when the last pure wolves were trapped out and put into a breeding
program. Genetic swamping with Coyotes was the proximal cause of their demise.
There are undoubtedly remnant Red Wolf genes in the Coyote genepool of
southeast Texas, although by now, they are many generations removed. Here is an
article that details some of this, there are more extensive articles out there
if you want to use Google.
http://tpwmagazine.com/archive/2012/dec/LLL_redwolf/
[http://tpwmagazine.com/advertising/images/TPWF_Aug2015.jpg]<http://tpwmagazine.com/archive/2012/dec/LLL_redwolf/>
Legend, Lore & Legacy: Last Stand of the Red Wolf|December
...<http://tpwmagazine.com/archive/2012/dec/LLL_redwolf/>
tpwmagazine.com
????????Last Stand of the Red Wolf ?????????America's 'other wolf' was
reintroduced to the wild after a last-ditch roundup in ...
tony gallucci
ingram/kerrville/hunt, texas
hurricanetg@xxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:hurricanetg@xxxxxxxxxxx>
http://tonygallucci.dAportfolio.com
________________________________
From: texbirds-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <texbirds-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> on behalf
of Ray Porter <ray.porter314@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, January 31, 2017 8:31 AM
To: texbirds@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [texbirds] Harris County TX wolf
Are there Red Wolves in Harris County? If yes, there may be a pair at San
Jacinto State Park.
Ray Porter
Highlands, TX
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