Lincoln Park Zoo's wolves add to flavor of neighborhood

(POSTED: 8/2/10) Lincoln Park long has been a neighborhood of noises: cabs honking, sirens wailing, tavern patrons emptying onto the streets at closing time.
But in the past few years a new sound has become part of the fabric of the area: howling.
Since red wolves arrived at Lincoln Park Zoo, their howls have added to the tenor, echoing well beyond the animals' enclosure on the zoo's west side.
For some locals, it's endearing, if at times a little spooky.
"For a moment I thought my night was going to turn into something out of a Harry Potter or Twilight novel," said 23-year-old Ellen Romer, recalling the first time she heard the wolves, at night after she got off a CTA bus and started walking to her apartment.
"It was a bit frightening, but after you realize what is going on -- I didn't find it a nuisance. It was just a very grounding experience to remember that other creatures share this big city with us, too."
Joe Mayer, 66, had a similar take, saying: "I sit in the park and read whenever the weather allows it, and I hear them all the time. . . . They are harmless creatures just doing what they naturally are inclined to do. People enjoy them, and I think that is most important."
But one local -- 27-year-old William Hayes -- found the howling a bit old.
"I literally hear them all the time," Hayes said. "I walk home from work and I hear them. I rollerblade down the street and I hear them. Anytime a siren goes by, they go crazy. It can be really annoying since it happens so frequently."
Zoo spokeswoman Sharon Dewar said she's "never received any complaints about the howling in years. On the contrary, if the wolves start to howl, people will scamper to the fenceline because they think it's cool."
Red wolves are considered "critically endangered," according to the zoo, which is participating in a program to reintroduce some back into the wild.
The first red wolf arrived at the zoo about five years ago, and now there are eight there, Dewar said.
By Maddie Asebrook, for ChicagoWildlifeNews.com
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