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Conservation officials use variety of tests, including DNA, to determine wolf or coyote

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(MCT) — KANSAS CITY, Mo. — From high up in a tree stand, the hunter poised his crossbow.

A coyote was coming into range. A big one. From the look of it, maybe even record size for Missouri.

The shaft zipped with deadly aim. But when the hunter climbed down and inspected his “coyote,” he noticed things. The muzzle was wider. The legs seemed too long, the ears too short. And it was even bigger than the bowman realized.

This, he thought with rising panic, was no Howard County coyote.

Missouri, with its ever-growing bear census — perhaps 650 statewide — and smattering of mountain lions, has had only two wolf sightings in the last decade.

Perhaps one more as of Nov. 2.

The Missouri Department of Conservation got a call. The hunter said he’d been inside the Franklin Island Conservation Area, where he was licensed to hunt both deer and coyote.

But wolves are listed as a protected species in Missouri. The worried bowman, who asked to stay anonymous, wasn’t in trouble, despite regulations against killing a mountain lion, bear or wolf unless they present a danger. This kill was an honest case of mistaken identity, the department decided.

Word spread fast about the carcass heading to the department’s Columbia location. Seasoned biologists and animals agents crowded in, eager to see such a rare sight.

It weighed in at 81 pounds.

“Yeah, I think it’s a timber wolf,” said Jeff Beringer, a top mammal biologist.

Was the immature male someone’s “pet?” No tattoos or transponder tags. No collar or evidence of one.

Biologists inspected paws, toes, nails for the calluses that develop from the pacing of a caged animal. Nothing.

No lice, mange or broken teeth, either.

“A very healthy, strong specimen,” said Beringer. “Probably on a walkabout, and probably from one of the lake states.”

The necropsy of stomach contents also will offer clues.

“If we find a half-eaten taco then we’ll think this was probably somebody’s pet. But I don’t expect we’ll see anything more than what we guess would be in there,” he said. More like a diet of rabbits, voles and squirrels.

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