Wolvden Environmental and Research INC. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Research log:: Subject #F21-1462 ...Connection secured ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
Early Life:: Subject #F21-1462 likely came from a pack that had been spotted two years before her estimated birth, entering the park from the far north and showing characteristics of the Yukon wolves mixed with characteristics of the wolves more common to the park. Due to the lack of data surrounding #F21-1462 and her home-pack, it was likely that her puphood was spent being raised in seclusion in the far corners of the park where her small pack distanced themselves from the other wolves. Her early life would've been difficult going off of the many scars littered under her fur and it is possible that a large conflict was what drove her further south to where she would later meet up with #F20-8459.
The Formation Pack #P-11058:: Subject #F21-1462 was documented, tagged, and collared in early spring when research team #T-11 caught her and her mate #F20-8459 as they were moving through their claimed territory.
It was soon discovered during the physical health test done by team veterinarian Bernard August and head researcher Dr. Fredricka H. Stefanov that #F21-1462 was nearly full-term with a litter of puppies due to be born in around 2 weeks.
The den pack #P-11058 was using was discovered and later on while the pack was out hunting the team infiltrated the den and managed to place a hidden camera to document the impending birth. When the pack returned from the hunt trouble began as #F21-1462 immediately noticed something was wrong with the researcher's scent lingering in the air around the den. There were several tense days as #F21-1462 refused to go into or near the den and the pack seemed ready to move on.
It was a week and a half after the breeding pair was captured that the researchers' worries were put to rest as #F21-1462 was seen on the camera in the den with two small grey pups at her side.