A hungry wolf roamed into Duluth on Tuesday and killed a family's dog that its owner had taken on a walk along a popular trail.
A state conservation officer said that such an attack is rare, but that it is becoming more common because the deer population is not as plentiful in rural areas of northeastern Minnesota, leading wolves to prowl for food in more urban surroundings.
Leo, an 11-year-old golden retriever-corgi mix, was not on a leash and was about 15 to 20 yards from its owner on a short trail near Brighton Beach when the wolf pounced about noon, said Keith Olson, a longtime conservation officer with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR).
The dog's owner, Terry Irvin, of Duluth, said he didn't see the attack.
Olson went to the scene and said "the violence" of the kill site, the bite marks and the tracks convinced him that a lone wolf was responsible.
"That poor dog, Leo, was in the wrong place at the wrong time," said Olson, who described the trail as a favorite of dog owners who live near Lake Superior. "And lone wolves are a little more desperate."
Irvin said he and Leo, whom he and his wife adopted from a shelter nine years ago, went to the park two to three times a week "and we've never had a problem."
He said Tuesday's walk was like most others. "I got a little ahead of him, and I was waiting for him. And then I waited and waited, maybe five-six minutes, and called and whistled."