When Naya arrived in Belgium in January 2018, she was the first wolf to be tracked in the country for at least 100 years. She’d been followed with a radio collar since she was a cub, so scientists knew when she left her family pack in eastern Germany to start a new life across the border. They also knew when she met another interloper, the male wolf, August, in August 2018.
Click here for original story, Belgium’s first wolf in 100 years is presumed dead – have hopes of coexistence died with her?
Source: Phys.org