Rahul Sharma (Editor)

California Wolf Center

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Industry
  
Wildlife conservation

Founded
  
1977

Headquarters
  
Julian

California Wolf Center California Wolf Center Julian Top Tips Before You Go TripAdvisor

Key people
  
Norm Switzer, Chairman of the Board, Executive Director; Paul Kenis, Founder, Center Historian; Patrick Valentino, Director of Planning and Development; Daniel Moriarty, Secretary

Website
  
www.californiawolfcenter.org

Similar
  
Endangered Wolf Center, Wild Spirit Wolf Sanctuary, Snow Leopard Trust, Big Cat Rescue, Wolf Haven International

Profiles

California wolf center a day in the life


California Wolf Center is a 501(c)3 nonprofit located 50 miles east of San Diego, near the town of Julian, California. It is a one-of-a-kind, conservation, education, and research center dedicated to wolf recovery in the wild. They are a statewide organization with staff and volunteers throughout California striving to pave the way for the return of wolves in California. Founded in 1977 to educate the public about wildlife and ecology, the Center is currently home to several packs of gray wolves, some of which play an important role in educational programs. These wolves serve as ambassadors representing wolves in the wild. The Center also hosts highly endangered Mexican gray wolves, now being reintroduced into the southwestern United States.

Contents

California Wolf Center California Wolf Center

California wolf center wolves howling


Mission

California Wolf Center The California Wolf Center

According to its website, the California Wolf Center's mission is to aid in the recovery of wild populations of wolves, which it does through a combination of conservation, education, and research.

California Wolf Center httpswwwwolfquestorgimagescwclogojpg

Government-sponsored eradication programs almost wiped out the Mexican wolf in the lower 48 United States. In the mid-1970s, only seven unrelated Mexican wolves were available to start a captive breeding program. Today, as a result of that successful breeding program, there are approximately 83 free-ranging Mexican wolves living in the wild. However, they remain one of the rarest land mammals in North America.

California Wolf Center Internships

The Center aims to further human understanding of the key role that wolves plays a in a healthy ecosystem. The Center's goal is to provide the most natural environment for all wolves living at the California Wolf Center, as well as provide information about gray wolves so that people can make informed decisions about the issues that affect humans and wolves.

The wolves

The Center is home to a pack of Rocky Mountain gray wolves and several packs of Mexican gray wolves, some of whom may be reintroduced into the southwestern United States. These wolves experience very limited human contact to avoid habituation and to preserve their wild behaviors.

The pack of Rocky Mountain gray wolves is an intact pack; this allows thousands of visitors each year to observe the social interactions that occur in a captive wolf pack. It also gives students and researchers opportunities to learn about wolf behavior.

The California Wolf Center participates in the Mexican Wolf Species Survival Plan, a bi-national effort to help Mexican gray wolves recover in the wild. Most of the Center’s Mexican gray wolf packs reside in off-exhibit habitats that help prepare them for potential release into the wild. Retaining their wild nature by keeping them off-exhibit will help them to survive if they are selected for release into the Mexican Wolf Recovery Area in New Mexico and Arizona. The Mexican gray wolves that are least likely to be released are one exhibit during educational programs. This gives visitors the opportunity to view the distinctive physical features of this subspecies of gray wolf.

References

California Wolf Center Wikipedia