State and federal wildlife agencies counted 319 endangered Mexican gray wolves across Arizona and New Mexico this past year. Up from 286 the previous year, it marks a decade of steady recovery.
Arizona and New Mexico wildlife agencies recently reported that the population of endangered Mexican gray wolves grew by 33 wolves last year.
Republican bills that would allow the endangered Mexican gray wolf to be killed and no longer be considered an endangered ...
Champions of the Mexican gray wolf are watching a bill introduced in Congress by Rep. Paul Gosar, R-AZ, to remove the wolf ...
Conservation works best when the U.S. government treats private landowners as partners. Jonathan Wood is vice president of law and policy at the Property and Environment Research Center.
The number of Mexican gray wolves in Arizona and New Mexico grew to at least 319 in 2025, as the species inches closer to possible downlisting from endangered to threatened.
T he wolves arrived in May of last year, just days after Paul Roen had driven his cattle back up to their summer pasture in ...
A newly revealed U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service document allows Catron County ranchers to kill any one endangered Mexican gray wolf who happens to be in the area of two grazing allotments near Quemado ...
Just 13 years after gray wolves were re-introduced into the lower 48 states, they're going off the Endangered Species List. At the same time, polar bears may go on the list—because of dangers that lie ...
The gray wolf will come off the endangered species list in Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin next month as the federal government unravels itself from the costly business of protecting wild animals.
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