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Physiologic Evaluation and Welfare Assessment of Mechanical and Chemical Immobilization with Fremont™ Humane Foot Snare and Medetomidine-Ketamine-Acepromazine in Free-Ranging Apennine

Submitted:

23 April 2026

Posted:

27 April 2026

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Abstract
The Apennine wolf (Canis lupus italicus) is a distinct subspecies whose ongoing population recovery in Italy has progressively increased the demand for live capture protocols validated for scientific monitoring and conservation management. Despite the widespread use of mechanical and chemical immobilization in European wolf management, no study has to date systematically evaluated the integrated combina-tion of a humane mechanical restraint system and a structured chemical immobiliza-tion protocol — and specifically the association of the Fremont™ humane foot snare with a medetomidine-ketamine-acepromazine (MKA) protocol, in terms of their joint physiological effects and welfare implications for this subspecies under operational field conditions. Between June 2010 and July 2017, thirteen free-ranging Apennine wolves were captured in Maiella National Park (central Apennines, Italy) using the Fremont™ snare and immobilized with a standardized MKA protocol. Cardiorespira-tory parameters, body temperature, peripheral oxygen saturation, venous blood gas values, and a comprehensive hematological and serum biochemical panel were rec-orded during immobilization. Mean heart rate was 100 ± 15 bpm, respiratory rate 24 ± 13 breaths/min, and body temperature 38.1 ± 1.0°C. No clinically significant hyper-thermia was recorded in the cohort as a whole. Hematological and biochemical values were broadly consistent with published reference ranges for the species, with condi-tion-specific deviations identified in two individuals (one pregnant female and one ju-venile presenting signs of transient capture-related myopathy), both of which resolved without clinical sequelae. No capture-related mortality occurred. All thirteen individ-uals survived the minimum post-capture monitoring period, and preliminary GPS da-ta suggest a transient reduction in movement activity in the immediate post-release period. These findings support the welfare adequacy and operational feasibility of the combined Fremont™ snare–MKA protocol for the Apennine wolf, and provide base-line physiological and hematobiochemical reference data for Canis lupus italicus rele-vant to future capture and conservation management programmes.
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