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Argentina to return two rare maned wolves to the wild

By Thomson Reuters Jun 24, 2026 | 11:24 AM

By Lucila Sigal

BUENOS AIRES, June 24 (Reuters) – Conservationists will return two maned wolves, rescued after the death of ​their mother, to the wild ‌next month in Argentina, where the long-legged wild canine is endangered.

The conservation nonprofit Temaiken Foundation said it received the male-female siblings named ‌Sun ​and Moon in September ⁠and will release them ⁠in July in the Ibera National Park, where they were born, in northern Corrientes Province.

The maned wolf is often ​described as looking like a fox on stilts with thin, long ⁠legs. But the animal ⁠is technically neither a wolf ​nor fox. It has large ears, reddish ​hair and a furry white tail.

Paula González, ‌the Temaikén Foundation’s conservation director, said local people have associated the maned wolf with legends due to its distinctive ⁠pitiful howl, including that of the “lobizón,” a man-wolf hybrid that roams at night.

“This also makes ⁠it a ‌risk factor in many ⁠places where that belief is ​deeply ‌rooted and where people want to ​kill ⁠it,” she said.

Scientists have equipped the animals with satellite collars so they can be tracked after their release.

(Reporting by Lucila Sigal; Writing by Leila Miller; Editing by ​Cynthia Osterman)