05/23/2026
In mid-April 2022, a female red wolf designated 2225F gave birth to six pups in the Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge in eastern North Carolina. It was the first wild red wolf litter born since 2018. There are fewer than thirty red wolves alive in the wild on earth. Every single one of them lives in five coastal counties in North Carolina. There is no second population.
2225F was born wild on the refuge. Her mate, 2323M, was born in captivity at the Endangered Wolf Center as part of the Species Survival Plan and released into the wild. They paired up on the Alligator River and established themselves as the breeding pair of what biologists call the Milltail family pack. When the six pups arrived, four females and two males, it broke a four-year drought of wild reproduction that had pushed the red wolf closer to functional extinction than any canid species on the planet.
The red wolf was once common across the entire southeastern United States. By the late 1960s, aggressive predator control programs and habitat loss had reduced the wild population to fourteen animals. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service captured those fourteen, declared the species extinct in the wild in 1980, and started a captive breeding program. In 1987, the first captive-bred red wolves were released into Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge. The program was the first attempt to restore a species declared extinct in the wild back onto the American landscape.
For a while, it worked. The wild population reached over a hundred animals by the mid-2000s. Then it collapsed. Gunshot deaths, vehicle strikes, coyote hybridization, and a federal management program that stopped releasing captive-bred wolves into the wild population allowed the numbers to fall to roughly seven known individuals by the early 2020s. A 2023 legal settlement between the Southern Environmental Law Center and the Fish and Wildlife Service forced the agency to reinvigorate the recovery program and resume releases.
2225F's 2022 litter arrived at the bottom of that collapse. Six pups born to one pair in one refuge in one state represented the entire wild reproductive output of the most endangered canid species in the world. The recovery program fostered a seventh pup into the litter, a male born at Point Defiance Zoo and Aquarium in Tacoma, Washington. The foster technique, placing a captive-born pup into a wild den within the first few days of life so the mother raises it as her own, is one of the most important tools in red wolf recovery. It introduces captive genetics into the wild population without the behavioral problems that come from releasing an adult animal that has never hunted or navigated wild terrain.
2225F produced again in 2023. Three females and two males, plus another fostered pup from Point Defiance, bringing that litter to six. She produced again in 2024. Eight pups. Three consecutive years of successful wild reproduction from the same female in a species that had not produced a single wild litter in the four years before she started.
Her mate 2323M died before the 2024 breeding season. The recovery program released a new male, 2191M, born at Wolf Haven International in Tenino, Washington. He paired with 2225F and sired the 2024 litter of eight. In 2025, the Milltail pack produced again, but this time the breeding female was 2503F, a two-year-old daughter of 2225F and 2323M. She paired with 2191M and produced eight more pups. 2225F, now the former matriarch, was observed helping raise the 2025 litter. A grandmother assisting with pups she did not bear, contributing to the survival of the next generation the way wolf pack structure is supposed to work when the pack is large enough to function.
As of the most recent monitoring, the wild red wolf population has climbed to roughly twenty-eight to thirty-one animals. Five breeding pairs produced four litters in the 2024-2025 season. The population could reach thirty-five to thirty-seven by summer 2025. Those numbers are still critically fragile. A single disease outbreak, a bad hurricane season, or a cluster of gunshot deaths could erase years of progress in a matter of months. But the trajectory has reversed, and the reversal started with one wild-born female in the Milltail pack who produced pups every year for three consecutive years when the species needed her most.
2225F did not choose to be the most important red wolf in America. She was born on a refuge in eastern North Carolina, paired with a captive-born male, and did what wolves do when conditions allow it. She bred, she denned, she raised pups, and she did it again the next year and the year after that. The fact that her reproductive output represented essentially the entire wild future of her species for three consecutive years is not a testament to her exceptionalism. It is a testament to how close to zero the red wolf had fallen before she started.
Source: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Red Wolf Recovery Program / North Carolina Wildlife Federation / Defenders of Wildlife / Wolf Haven International.