The latest decision removes federal protection for the gray wolf – which has a population believed to be about 6,000 – in the Lower 48 states. Alaska’s wolves are not considered endangered ...
Although the number of Mexican gray wolves is increasing, the genetic diversity of the wolf population is lower today than in 2007. The Service, along with other agencies, conducts an annual census of ...
The Michigan Department of Natural Resources confirms a gray wolf was mistaken ... and confirmed that the animal was a wolf. There's not a wolf population in the lower peninsula like there is ...
A new pack of endangered grey ... A pack of wolf pups from the Lassen pack in 2017. Kent Laudon, a wolf biologist for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife said the population is growing ...
The first pack was established in the state in 2015, and since then, California has continued growing its gray wolf population. Although their numbers are rising, the species is still considered ...
protection for all gray wolves in the lower 48 states except for a small population of Mexican wolves in Arizona and New Mexico. This delisting will have disastrous consequences for a species that has ...
In 2017, the Mexican gray wolf population in the U.S. wild consisted of 117 wolves. But as of 2023, the population had reached 257 wolves. The agency’s evaluation says the population has more ...