California’s Epic Traveling Wolf OR-93 is Dead After Vehicle Strike Along I-5

For Immediate Release, November 24, 2021

Contact:

Amaroq Weiss, (707) 779-9613, [email protected]

California’s Epic Traveling Wolf OR-93 is Dead After Vehicle Strike Along I-5

SACRAMENTO, Calif.— State wildlife agency officials announced today that OR-93, a radio-collared male wolf from Oregon who first entered California on Jan. 30, has died after being struck by a vehicle along Interstate 5 in Kern County.

In 2021 the young wolf made national headlines for traveling as far south as the southern Sierras and then west to San Luis Obispo and Ventura counties. He was the first reported wolf on the central coast in 200 to 300 years.

“I’m devastated to learn of the death of this remarkable wolf,” said Amaroq Weiss, senior wolf advocate with the Center for Biological Diversity. “His epic travels across California inspired the world. In this annual time of reflection, I thank him for the hope he gave us and for a brief glimpse into what it would be like for wolves to roam wild and free again. I only wish we’d been able to provide him with a safer world. California has to do so much more to preserve wildlife connectivity and protect animals like OR-93 from car strikes.”

According to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, OR-93’s death was reported by a truck driver on Nov. 10 to the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. The report came after the wolf’s body was seen along a dirt trail on a frontage road on Interstate 5. Examination at the state wildlife forensics lab confirmed that OR-93 died of injuries consistent with a vehicle strike.

The tragedy is a reminder that wildlife habitat, especially in California, has been sliced through by roads and development. In Kern County, where OR-93 was found, the wildlands continue to be threatened by sprawl development. Protecting habitat and building effective wildlife crossings in the form of overpasses and underpasses would help wolves safely re-establish here and prevent imperiled species like mountain lions from becoming locally extinct.

OR-93 was just over a year old when he was fitted with a radio collar in June 2020, near where he was born, south of Mt. Hood in Oregon. He left his pack and headed south, arriving in Modoc County, California in late January. He continued traveling swiftly, moving through more than a dozen counties by late March. He then turned west and continued to San Luis Obispo County, where his last radio-collar signal was detected in early April.

In late August a Kern County landowner checked his trail camera and discovered a video of the wolf taken near a water trough on his property in mid-May. In late September, three visual sightings were made of OR-93 in northern Ventura County.

“OR-93’s epic California journey was a beacon of hope in a time when other states are waging a brutal war on wolves, killing them by the hundreds,” Weiss said. “He was simply doing what wolves do, heading out on his own, searching for a mate. I always knew the odds of his finding another wolf on the Central Coast were slim to none, but his relentless wanderings seeking a kindred spirit connected him to the hearts of so many. He won’t be forgotten, and we’ll honor his memory by continuing to fight for the safety of wolves everywhere.”

Background

Only around 20 known wolves now live in California. The state’s wolves include the Lassen pack, whose territory covers portions of Plumas and Lassen counties, the Beckwourth pack in eastern Plumas County and the Whaleback pack in eastern Siskiyou County. OR-103, a lone wolf who dispersed from Oregon, also occupies part of eastern Siskiyou County.

The Whaleback and Lassen pack are confirmed to have had pups this year, and all three wolf families and OR-103 survived massive wildfires that swept through their territories this summer and fall.

The seven-member, all-black Shasta pack, California’s first in nearly 100 years, disappeared from Siskiyou County within months after its discovery in 2015, following the pack’s implications in two livestock casualties and amid fears of poaching.

California’s wolves were wiped out in the early 1900s by a nationwide, government-sponsored eradication program on behalf of the livestock industry. Wolves began to return to Oregon and Washington in the 2000s. In 2011 a wolf from Oregon, OR-7, made his way into California, becoming the first wild wolf confirmed in the state in 87 years. Since then, more wolves have ventured into the state from Oregon and elsewhere.

OR-7 later returned to Oregon, but several of his offspring also traveled to California, including a son who founded the Lassen pack and a daughter, OR-54, who traveled as far south as Sierra and Nevada counties in the Lake Tahoe Basin before being found dead in Shasta County almost two years ago.

Gray wolves are protected as an endangered species in California under state law. Federal protections for wolves were recently ended by the federal government, but lawsuits have been filed by the Center and allies challenging this premature and unscientific delisting.

RSWolf_OR-93_Austin_Smith_Jr_Confed_Tribes_of_Warm_Springs_June_2020_FPWC(2).jpg
Wolf OR-93. Photo courtesy of Austin James, Jr., Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. Image is available for media use.

The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1.7 million members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.

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