Wolvden Environmental and Research INC. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Research log:: Subject #F20-8459 ...Connection secured ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
Early Life:: Not much is known of Subject #F20-8459’s early life. However, going off of the distinct markings of his coat and recorded data from around the year of his approximated birth it is likely that he was born to one of the packs that have been inhabiting the coniferous forests here in British Columbia. He is larger than most wolves his age and was likely either a singleton pup, twin, or had most of his littermates die-off early on giving him access to abundant resources as a pup to fuel his rapid growth. He shows only mild scarring to his body which indicates that he may have come from a very successful and large pack that did not often need to engage in fights against other packs who were stealing territory.
The Formation Pack #P-11058:: Subject #F20-8459 was first discovered, tagged, recorded, and collared during the new beginnings of spring by research team #T-11 alongside his mate #F21-1462. The discovery of this breeding pair began the research and documentation for their newly-formed pack #P-11058.
Lead researcher Dr. Fredrika H. Stefanov was assigned to the ground team that captured the pair and with the help of the team's veterinarian Bernard August confirmed the breeding pair's surprisingly young age as well as the existence of their legacy ready to emerge from #F21-1462's womb.
A week and a half later the delivery of the litter was confirmed through a hidden den camera and #F20-8459 and #F21-1462 became one of the youngest pairs of grey wolves in Canada to produce a viable litter.