Marlin Perkins' Legacy: Wild Wolves Bred at Facility

Mexican Gray wolf pups passe along the fence line at the Wild Canid Survival Center in Eureka, Mo. Friday, Aug. 29, 2003. The center is known as the Wolf Sanctuary is a captive breeding facility started by the late Marlin Perkins, former director of the St. Louis Zoo. AP Photo/James A. Finley

ST. LOUIS (AP) -- Two artificially inseminated Mexican gray wolves recently birthed a combined eight living pups at a research site founded by late naturalist Marlin Perkins, marking perhaps the first time the non-surgical technique has worked with endangered wolves.

Wildlife officials cheered word of the newcomers to the St. Louis-area Wild Canid Survival and Research Center -- the world's largest holder and breeder of Mexican gray wolves -- as proof of the technology's usefulness in rebuilding the population of the animals.