Wolf Killed In N.B. 1st In Century

CBC  |  Posted: 05/08/2012 6:00 pm Updated: 05/09/2012 9:30 am


New Brunswick has its first confirmed wolf killing in more than a century.


DNA tests show a large animal shot on the Acadian Peninsula last month was a wolf, hunter Jacques Mallet told CBC News on Tuesday.


Mallet said he recently received a short report, confirming the animal he shot was a wolf and not a coyote, or a mixture of the two.


He’s surprised by the results and wants to know more, he said.


Mallet has now sent the animal’s body to the New Brunswick Museum in Saint John for further testing, he said.


The last time a wolf was reported killed in the province was in 1876, provincial wildlife official have said.


Wolves were believed to have been hunted to extinction after the province starting offering a bounty in 1858 of 15 shillings for every wolf killed.


Mallet shot the wolf at Saint-Simon, near Caraquet. It weighed 86 pounds — about three times bigger than an average coyote.


Don McAlpine, a zoologist at the New Brunswick Museum, could not be reached for comment Tuesday. But in a previous interview, he told CBC News he figured it was "just a matter of time before a wolf turned up" in New Brunswick.


He said there had been a number of confirmed wolves in Quebec, south of the St. Lawrence, in the past decade, and about 10 in the northern New England states.


Department of Natural Resources officials also could not be reached for comment Tuesday.


Mallet hopes to have the animal stuffed.


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06:32 PM on 05/10/2012
How good a hunter is this guy if he cannot recognize a wolf (3 X the size of a coyote)?
Shoot first and ask questions later, I guess.
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01:15 AM on 05/10/2012
The brutal, needless execution of this DEFENCELESS intelligent wolf makes me sick to my stomach! Hicks with big guns lacking "balls" and intelligence in the backwoods of N.B. Ugh!
09:59 PM on 05/09/2012
It seems that on every news site, anytime there is a story about a bear or cougar or wolf being shot the city folk start the armchair observations. Senseless killing is not the way to be but there is a thing called the food chain and we are at the top for a reason.

In this particular case I thought I read elsewhere that the man thought it was a big coyote or a coyote/dog mixture when he shot it. There is a reason why people shoot coyotes, if you don't know what it is, simply just visit a farmer who just had his sheep or other livestock killed by a coyote. The poor farm animals do not die a very pleasant death at all when it involves a coyote. Try a Google search, you can even look at the pictures of how coyotes operate when they kill a farm animal.
06:13 PM on 05/09/2012
makes me sick. big man, tough guy - trigger happy idiot.
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SiameseTrainer
...we are Sia..mese if you don't please..
01:30 AM on 05/09/2012
After a hundred years a wolf reappears in New Brunswick only to be shot by some broken gearbox who wants a stuffed trophy. I have an idea for a stuffed trophy, take the rifle and stuff it somewhere tight and dark in the gearbox. I am sure his wifey would approve.
06:15 PM on 05/09/2012
couldn't agree with you more. nothing but a very little man with a big fire stick - deserves the same respect that he gave that wolf.
08:08 PM on 05/08/2012
Nice! A species that hasn't been seen in over a hundred years and it gets shot buy some yahoo who wants you to know how big his cajones are. Great news.
08:05 PM on 05/08/2012
Not much context here. Was it a threat to someone, or was this just a "thrill kill" like those that brought wolves to extinction in N.B. before?

Guess you can take the wolf out of N.B. but you can't take the savage out of man.....
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Opus Fideo
Atheist. Social Democrat. Canadian.
07:03 PM on 05/08/2012
Sarah Palin did it, from a helicopter, while observing Russia. True story