Artist reconstruction of the Andean
wolf's possible appearance in life (artist identity and © unknown to me, image
present here on The Full Wiki; reproduced here on
ShukerNature upon a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational
purposes only)
Welcome to another contribution to this
intermittent series of early cryptozoological and other anomalous animal articles
of mine exclusively reproduced here on ShukerNature from their now-defunct
original British and continental European magazines. It documents a
longstanding canine mystery beast known variously as the Andean wolf or
Hagenbeck's wolf, discovered by professional animal collector Lorenz Hagenbeck
and first brought to scientific attention by German zoologist and pioneering
cryptozoologist Dr Ingo Krumbiegel.
Krumbiegel's illustrative comparisons
between the imagined appearance in life of the Andean wolf (left) and its
postulated relative the maned wolf (right) (public domain)
This article of mine was first published in the July-August
1996 issue of a long-discontinued bimonthly British magazine entitled All
About Dogs, and was the very first publication to include a colour
photograph of this cryptid's distinctive (albeit by now somewhat faded) pelt (a few months later it also
appeared in my book The Unexplained, published in November 1996).
My July-August 1996 article re the
Andean wolf from All About Dogs – please click its image to enlarge it
for reading purposes [NB - for Cabreera, read Cabrera] (© Dr Karl Shuker)
The skull attributed by Krumbiegel to the Andean wolf was lost during World War II, but it had already been discounted by some zoologists as having originated from a domestic dog. As for the pelt: sixteen years after my above article was published,
I included the following brief update regarding this controversial canid as
part of its coverage within my book The Encyclopaedia of New and Rediscovered Animals (2012):
In 2000, an attempt was made to
analyse DNA samples from the pelt. Unfortunately, the outcome was
unsatisfactory, because the samples were found to be contaminated somehow with
dog, wolf, human, and even pig DNA, and to make matters worse still, the pelt
had been chemically treated.
However, DNA analysis techniques have vastly
improved since 2000, so for quite some time I still had high hopes that further
studies of this nature upon the Andean wolf's unique pelt would take place and
in turn provide a more satisfactory, precise outcome. Yet as far as I am aware,
no additional investigations of it have occurred to date. Nevertheless, based
upon earlier findings noted here, it does seem more likely that its pelt is
indeed from a domestic dog (albeit of undetermined breed or crossbred heritage)
rather than, as originally postulated by Krumbiegel, from a distinct species
(and genus) in its own right.
I'm curious: how does the size of the mystery pelt compare to that of a maned wolf?
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