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Giant coyote killed in southern Michigan turns out to be a gray wolf — despite the species vanishing from region 100 years ago

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Genetic tests have revealed that an animal killed in a legal coyote hunt in Michigan's Calhoun County was actually a gray wolf, state officials say. But experts don't know how the animal got there in the first place. 

Calhoun County is located in the southern half of Michigan's Lower Peninsula, where no gray wolves (Canis lupus) have been sighted for over a century. A population of around 630 gray wolves inhabits the state's Upper Peninsula, 250 miles (400 kilometers) away, and some wolves have occasionally been spotted in the northern half of the Lower Peninsula — roughly 130 miles (200 km) from Calhoun County.

"While rare, instances of wolves traversing large distances have been documented, including signs of wolves in recent decades in Michigan's Lower Peninsula," Brian Roell, a biologist and large carnivore specialist with the state's Department of Natural Resources (DNR), said in a statement

The most recent reported gray wolf sighting in the northern Lower Peninsula was in 2014, when biologists from the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians — whose headquarters are located 220 miles (350 km) north of Calhoun County — spotted a wolf on a trail camera during an eagle survey, according to the statement.

However, the presence of gray wolves as far south as Calhoun County is highly unusual, and the DNR is investigating how and why the animal ended up there. 

The gray was killed during a legal hunt in January. A hunter said he mistook the wolf for a large coyote

Related: Are dogs smarter than wolves?

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