“…Endemic to the eastern United States, red wolves share a common ancestor with coyotes and differentiated from them in allopatry during the Pleistocene but began interbreeding with coyotes in the southeastern United States during the early 20th century, when remnant wolf populations began interacting with expanding coyote populations (Chambers, Fain, Fazio, & Amaral, 2012;Nowak, 2002Nowak, , 2003Wilson et al, 2000). By 1980, the red wolf was extirpated from the wild but, via a captive breeding program, reintroduced into eastern North Carolina beginning in 1987 (Hinton, Chamberlain, & Rabon, 2013;United States Fish and Wildlife Service [USFWS], 1989).…”