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		 New 
		pair of red wolves arrive at Miller Park Zoo MPZ holding public vote for female wolf name
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            [December 26, 2014] 
            
            
			BLOOMINGTON 
			– Two new Red Wolves, a male and female, are settling into their new 
			home at Miller Park Zoo. | 
		
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			 “Elohi” (Cherokee for “of the earth”), the 
			two-and-a-half-year-old male, came from Chehaw Wild Animal Park in 
			Albany, Georgia. The female arrived from Point Defiance Zoo and 
			Aquarium in Tacoma, Washington. 
 The female has yet to be named, so the Miller Park Zoo is giving the 
			community the opportunity to vote for their favorite name on the 
			Miller Park Zoo’s Facebook page. The naming options are listed 
			below.
 
				Kawoni — Cherokee for Flower Moon (April), which is her 
				birth monthTacoma — For her birthplace of Tacoma, WashingtonWaya — Cherokee for wolf 
				 In hopes to bolster the numbers of the endangered species, 
				the Miller Park Zoo staff will make sure everything is ready for 
				the early 2015 breeding season. Miller Park Zoo had past success 
				with increasing the population of the Red Wolf. The last Red 
				Wolf, "Kai," left the Zoo in September to go to the Niabi Zoo 
				near the Quad Cities. Kai arrived at the Miller Park Zoo in 2009 
				and gave birth to three litters in 2010, 2011 and 2012. In 2012, 
				two of Kai's pups were released into the wild in North Carolina, 
				which is the only wild location where Red Wolves are found 
				today. All the moves were recommendations from the Red Wolf 
				Species Survival Plan. 
			
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				 The Red Wolf is one of the world's most endangered Canids. 
				Once common throughout the Eastern and South Central United 
				States, Red Wolf populations were decimated by the early part of 
				the 20th Century as a result of intensive predator control 
				programs and the degradation and alteration of the species' 
				habitat. The Red Wolf was designated an endangered species in 
				1967, and shortly thereafter the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 
				initiated efforts to conserve the species. Today, more than 100 
				Red Wolves roam their native habitats in eastern North Carolina, 
				and nearly 200 Red Wolves are maintained in captive breeding 
				facilities like the Miller Park Zoo throughout the United 
				States. 
			[Miller Park Zoo] 
			
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