Federal wildlife managers have been
working to return the endangered Mexican gray wolf to the American Southwest
for the past 15 years.
Every now and then, there's a genetic hiccup. It happens
when a wolf breeds with a domestic dog, producing a litter of hybridized pups.
Just
last month, an animal that looked like a wolf was spotted in the mountain
community of Reserve near the Arizona-New Mexico border. Experts with the wolf
management team say the uncollared animal was most likely a wolf-dog hybrid.
While
it doesn't happen often, a spokesman for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
says hybridization is a concern.
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