Obituary for a Wolf
She was known as 527, but she was much
more than a number.
She was one of
Yellowstone’s beloved wolves.

Wolf 527, pictured above, was beloved by
wolf-watchers and wildlife biologists who
chronicled her courageous life. Sadly, she
was also one of the first wolves killed in
October -- during Montana's first wolf hunt
in modern times.
Read the moving tribute to this brave mother
wolf and then speak out to call off the
guns!
Dear Sheila,
I know you will be as
saddened as I was by an obituary written about Wolf 527, one of Yellowstone
National Park’s beloved wolves.
But I hope this tragic story will motivate you to
speak out to save the hundreds of wolves in Greater Yellowstone and beyond
that remain in mortal danger.
Wolf 527 originated from the Druid pack -- one of the best known wolf
packs in Yellowstone' s Lamar Valley, the scene of numerous National Geographic
and PBS documentaries.
For years, the movements of some of the members of this Yellowstone pack have
been monitored by biologists and wolf-watchers equipped with radio tracking
devices and powerful spotting scopes. One of those wolf-watchers wrote the
obituary for 527 -- and I am honored to share excerpts of it with you today.
"527 was a wolf that marched to the beat of a very different drummer."
As a yearling, 527 left the Druids to join the Slough pack -- where she quickly
became the beta (second-in-command) female. Then in 2007, she and a male wolf
set off to found their own pack -- the Cottonwood Creek pack -- where she became
the alpha (first-in-command) female.
As a leader of the Cottonwood pack, 527 was known to be a master of survival
strategies. While four other packs that inhabited the same area suffered
dismal fates, her pack thrived. As her biographer recounts, "She was a
genius wolf in her tactics. Strategy was her game and she was a master at it.
She would return to feed her pups in the dark of night because she would not
take the risk of crossing the road."
But in the end, despite 527's "unbelievable survival strategies," this
resilient wolf "was not able to outthink a rifle" and was killed on
October 3 when Montana unleashed its first public wolf hunt in modern times.
Since the public hunts began, 156 wolves in the Northern Rockies have met 527's
fate. And over the next year, more than 500 wolves could be shot to
death by hunters and government agents ... reducing the region's wolf
population by a staggering 40 percent!
But the story doesn't have to end as sadly as 527's life -- if
everyone who cares about wolves speaks out against this carnage now.
So please take a moment to join the national outcry to save wolves. Just
click this link to tell the Interior Secretary to put wolves back on the
Endangered Species list.
Thank you in advance for taking action on the wolves' behalf. Together, we can
make sure that the death of 527 will not be in vain -- by winning back federal
protections for the rest of Greater Yellowstone' s storied wolves.