http://pressherald.mainetoday.com/news/state/060308wolf.shtmlERROL, N.H. — Somewhere out there, a Canis lupus roams. The North Woods harbor moose and coyote, bobcat and lynx, and thousands of deer. And, quite likely, a handful of North America's great predator, the gray wolf.
"I saw him right there, standing broadside with that massive cranium," said Bob Lord, who jogged down this logging road last fall and came face to face with a wolf. "Oh, my God, what a beauty."
Extirpated by man more than a century ago in every corner of New England, the gray wolf (aka Canis lupus) seems on the verge of re-establishing a toehold in the 20 million-acre North Woods, a forest that extends from northern Maine to New Hampshire and Vermont and New York. Lone wolves appear to be wandering down from Quebec, reconnoitering these lands and disappearing again. No one knows when these wolves will find a mate.
But wildlife biologists say there is no reason that a wolf pack could not form here, perhaps very soon.
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