|     HOME  |  WOLF
                      NEWS  |  Cat's new Wolf
                      BookWyoming news reporter Cat Urbigkit lives in the
                    heart of wolf country, near Big Piney, Wyoming, a few hundred
                    miles south of Yellowstone National Park. As a news reporter,
                    rancher, researcher and Wyoming resident, she has followed
                    the wolf issue for many years and written many articles on
                    the topic, as well as an upcoming book on the history of
                    wolves in Wyoming.
 The goal of this website is to present up-to-date, accurate
information about what is happening with wolves, focusing on wolves in the Rocky
Mountains, but referring to wolf happenings outside our region when there is
some local relevance. Rather than an agenda-driven advocacy site, this is the
place to be for the facts about wolves, with a strong focus on what’s happening
on the ground.
 We invite those living in areas inhabited by wolves to contact
Cat with news tips, photographs, or other information. We also invite those who
want to support this endeavor to sign on as sponsors, and for our re aders to
support those sponsors.
 Article
                          by Cat & Jim Urbigkit: Using
                          dogs to help protect livestock from predators (May,
                          2010)
 2013
                    Wolf Watch Story Archive    12/26/13: Western
                            Wolf Hunt Update (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Wyoming Game and Fish Department
                    reports that as of December 23, 2013 at 11 a.m., 23 wolves
                    have been taken in this fall's trophy wolf hunt (of a total
                    quota of 26) since the hunting season opened this fall, and
                    35 have been harvested in the predator zone since the state
                    of the year. The hunting season in the trophy game area is
                    slated to close at the end of the year, or when the quota
                    is reached, whichever occurs first...... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  12/26/13: Idaho
                            hires wolf hunter (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Idaho Department of Fish & Game
                    has hired a wolf hunter to eliminate two wolf packs in a
                    remote region of the state, with the goal of helping the
                    area's elk population to recover from low calf survival..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  12/16/13: Wyoming
                            Wolf Season Remains Open (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Wyoming Game and Fish Department
                    reports as of 4 p.m. December 10, 2013, a total of 19 wolves
                    have been harvested in this year's trophy game areas during
                    the hunting season. The 2013 Trophy Quota for wolves is 26,
                    so all but five hunting areas are now closed, with these
                    areas to remain open until the harvest is reached or until
                    the end of the year, whichever comes first. In addition,
                    34 wolves have been harvested in the state's predator zone
                    since the start of the year...... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  12/16/13: More
                            Wolf Fundraisers, More Lawsuits (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife
                    provides daily satellite downloads of locations of GPS-collared
                    wolves to help ranchers better protect their rangeland cattle.
                    The ranchers must sign an agreement to keep the information
                    confidential, but range riders are able to access the information..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  11/21/13: Update
                            on western wolf harvest (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife
                    provides daily satellite downloads of locations of GPS-collared
                    wolves to help ranchers better protect their rangeland cattle.
                    The ranchers must sign an agreement to keep the information
                    confidential, but range riders are able to access the information..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  11/15/13: Idaho
                            wolf trapping season opens (By Idaho Fish
                    and Game)  The wolf trapping season opens
                    Friday, November 15, in the wolf management 
                    zones in northern and eastern parts of the state. The seasons
                    run into March. Trappers must complete a required wolf trapping
                    class before they can buy wolf 
                    trapping tags. Licensed trappers may buy up to five wolf
                    trapping tags per trapping season for 
                    use in those zones with an open wolf trapping season. In
                    addition, up to five 
                    wolf hunting tags may be purchased per calendar year for
                    hunting. Wolf tags cost $11.50 for resident hunters, and
                    $31.75 for nonresidents. 
                    Trapping tags are valid for the trapping season, but wolf
                    hunting tags are valid 
                    only for the calendar year.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  11/15/13: Washington
                            Ranchers Track Wolves (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife
                    provides daily satellite downloads of locations of GPS-collared
                    wolves to help ranchers better protect their rangeland cattle.
                    The ranchers must sign an agreement to keep the information
                    confidential, but range riders are able to access the information..... (Click on the link
                    above for the complete story.)
  11/15/13: Five
                            wolf hunt areas remain open (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Five wolf hunt areas in Wyoming
                    remaining open. The Wyoming Game & Fish Department reports
                    that as of Nov. 13 at 3 p.m., 19 wolves have been harvested
                    in the state's trophy wolf hunting areas (of a total quota
                    of 26). The remaining hunt areas will remain open until the
                    quota is reached, or until the end of the year (whichever
                    comes first). In addition, there have been 32 wolves killed
                    in the predatory zone of the state since the beginning of
                    the year..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  11/5/13: Eighteen
                            wolves harvested in trophy zone (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Wyoming Game and Fish Department
                    reports as of November 4, 2013 at 3:34 p.m., 18 wolves have
                    been harvested in this year's trophy game areas during the
                    hunting season. The 2013 Trophy Quota for wolves is 26, so
                    six hunting areas are now closed, with six remaining open
                    until the harvest is reached or until the end of the year,
                    whichever comes first. In addition, 32 wolves have been harvested
                    in the state's predator zone since the start of the year..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  10/28/13: More
                            wolf hunt areas close (By Wyoming Game & Fish
                    Department)  Hunters harvesting wolves in Wyoming
                    continue to experience success. The Wyoming Game and Fish
                    Department reported that as of 8:50 a.m., October 28, 2013,
                    17 wolves were harvested in the trophy game harvest season,
                    of the total quota of 26. In addition, 32 wolves have been
                    harvested in Wyoming's predator zone.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  10/24/13: Wolf
                            Hunt Area Three closes (By Wyoming Game & Fish
                    Department)  The quota of three wolves for wolf hunt
                    area three was met over the past weekend and will be closed
                    the remainder of the season. The wolf hunting season began
                    October 1 and ends December 31, 2013, except for hunt area
                    12 south of Jackson, which opened October 15 and closes December
                    31. As with other trophy game species, wolves in these areas
                    are managed under a mortality quota system. The hunting season
                    in each specific wolf area will remain open until the quota
                    for the area is reached, or until December 31, whichever
                    comes first. All hunters must call the wolf hotline daily
                    (800-264-1280) to ensure the quota for wolves in each specific
                    area has not been reached. Hunters harvesting wolves in areas
                    where wolves are classified as trophy game area required
                    to report the kill within 24 hours by calling the hotline
                    at 800-264-1280. Within five days, they are required to present
                    the skull and pelt to a game warden, biologist, or other
                    personnel at a WGFD regional office for registration..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  10/17/13: Three
                            wolf hunt areas reach quotas (By Wyoming Game & Fish
                    Department)  Two weeks into Wyoming’s
                    second wolf season, a total of 13 wolves, or half of the
                    2013 quota, have been reported as legally harvested through
                    the Wyoming Game and Fish Department’s trophy
                    game hotline (as of Oct. 17 at 4:40 p.m.). Hunt areas 10,
                    five and two are closed for the remainder of the season as
                    their established quotas have been met.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  10/11/13: Wolf
                            Harvest Update (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  As of the end of the day, Friday,
                    October 11, 2013, hunters have harvested six wolves since
                    the state's wolf hunting season opened October 1, of the
                    state's total allowable harvest of 26 wolves with northwestern
                    Wyoming's trophy game areas. In addition, two wolves were
                    harvested illegally prior to the start of the season, but
                    are tallied against the quota. Two wolf hunt areas are closed
                    after reaching their quotas: Area 5, with its total of three
                    wolves, and Area 10, with its one-wolf quota. In addition
                    to the 8 wolves killed as noted above, there have been 28
                    wolves harvested in Wyoming's predator zone since the start
                    of 2013
... (Click on the link above for the complete story.)
  10/5/13: Economic
                            bite goes beyond predation (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  An ongoing Oregon study assessing
                    wolf-cattle interaction and its impact on 
                    cattle behavior is delivering some insightful results. Article
                    in Beef magazine, 
                    written by Heather Smith Thomas.
 ... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  9/18/13: Wolves
                            return to French Alps (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The return of wolves to the French
                    Alps has brought a struggle for livestock producers to cope
                    with the predators killing livestock - about 20,000 livestock
                    in five years, according to a recent feature in the New York
                    Times. European Union countries have made continued pastoralism
                    a priority, but the success of the wolf recovery program
                    in the region is viewed as a threat to that practice. Read
                    more about it in the New York Times article linked below.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  9/18/13: RMEF
                            funding wolf programs (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation
                    is providing grants to state wildlife agencies in several
                    Rocky Mountain states for their wolf research and management
                    efforts. Wyoming and Idaho each received $50,000 grants,
                    while Montana received a $25,000 grant... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  9/18/13: Tales
                            from a Wolf Manager (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Federal wolf manager Mike Jimenez
                    of Jackson Hole, Wyoming has written a fantastic article
                    for the Fall 2013 issue of International Wolf Magazine. In
                    the piece, Jimenez provides specific examples of what it's
                    like to manage wolves on the ground, all the while under
                    pressure from wolf advocates and those who seek wolf control.
                    Jimenez credits local tolerance of wolves, and active agency
                    management efforts, with the success of the wolf recovery
                    program, and concludes that "it's important to honor
                    our original commitments to minimize wolf depredations and
                    use hunting as a management tool to control wolf population
                    size and distribution."... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  9/11/13: Of
                            Livestock, Predators, & Guardians (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Sheep guardian dog, Rena, was badly
                    injured in an attack by wolves trying to get at the herd
                    over the weekend. Wolves and bears have been stalking the
                    sheep herds, which are protected by up to 11 livestock guard
                    dogs and guard donkeys, as well as sheepherders who live
                    with the flocks. In the aftermath of a late-night attack
                    that left nine sheep dead, and another guard dog besides
                    Rena mortally wounded with his throat slashed, federal officials
                    removed two wolves. When predators and prey share the same
                    range, there will be conflicts at times. Rena is stitched
                    up and getting treatment. Thank you to everyone who expressed
                    concern for her welfare... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  8/28/13: Wolf
                            killed in Bighorns (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  A 130-pound female wolf was trapped
                    and killed in the Bighorn Mountains after killing 21 sheep,
                    according to media reports. The Sheridan County Predator
                    Management District sent a trapper to the site of the recent
                    sheep kills. After determining that a wolf was responsible
                    for the sheep kills, traps were set and the wolf was soon
                    captured and then dispatched... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  8/28/13: Idaho
                            wolf hunt opens Friday (By Idaho Fish
                    and Game)  The 2013-2014 wolf hunting season opens
                    throughout the state on Friday, August 30. The season runs
                    through March 31, except in the Lolo, Selway and Middle Fork
                    zones and in that portion of Unit 16 in the Dworshak-Elk
                    City Zone north of the Selway River where the season closes
                    June 30. The wolf hunting season is open year round on private
                    land only in the Panhandle Zone. An individual may buy up
                    to five wolf hunting tags per calendar year, but hunters
                    may use only two wolf tags in some parts of the state in
                    a calendar year. Wolf hunting tags are available for $11.50
                    for Idaho residents and $31.75 for nonresidents. They are
                    valid for a calendar year.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  8/28/13: Feds
                            make Mexican Wolf deals (By Center for
                    Biological Diversity)  Under two agreements
                    reached with the Center for Biological Diversity, the U.S.
                    Fish and Wildlife Service will propose increased recovery
                    territory for Mexican gray wolves in Arizona and New Mexico
                    and will drop plans to capture wolves entering the two states
                    from Mexico. 
                    The first settlement was reached in a lawsuit challenging
                    a permit the Service had granted itself in November 2011
                    authorizing the trapping and indefinite incarceration of
                    any wolves entering Arizona and New Mexico from Mexico. The
                    second agreement concerns a long-sought revision to a 1998
                    rule for managing the roughly 75 wolves that have been reintroduced
                    into a small area in central Arizona and New Mexico called
                    the Blue Range Wolf Recovery Area. As part of the agreements,
                    the agency will finalize a rule to allow direct release of
                    captive Mexican gray wolves into New Mexico and to allow
                    Mexican wolves to establish territories in an expanded area
                    of the two states.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  8/28/13: Wolf
                            attacks Minnesota teen (By Minnesota
                    Department of Natural Resources)  A 16-year-old boy
                    was injured in an apparent wolf bite early Saturday morning,
                    Aug. 24, near the lakeshore of the West Winnie Campground
                    on Lake Winnibigoshish in north-central Minnesota. The boy
                    sustained multiple puncture wounds and a laceration to his
                    head of about 11 centimeters long. The wolf ran into the
                    woods after the boy kicked it. Other campers at the U.S.
                    Forest Service campground saw a wolf with coloration and
                    markings matching the description of the animal involved
                    in the attack on the boy. Before this incident, a serious
                    injury or fatal attack on a human had never been documented
                    in Minnesota. There have been two wolf attack fatalities
                    in North America in the last decade. One was in northern
                    Canada and another was in Alaska.... (Click on the
                    link above for the complete story.)
  8/25/13: Opinion:
                            Range Sheep & Big Predators (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  I am weary of the snide, ignorant,
                    and vicious comments made in response to last week’s
                    death of 176 sheep due to a wolf attack in eastern Idaho
                    (see stories linked below). Some of the sheep were directly
                    bitten and killed, but the majority of the animals were killed
                    in a stampeding pileup as they tried a hillside escape. My
                    point is that while it is easy to sit back and pass judgment
                    on others about what they should have, or should not have,
                    done in a moment of crisis, it’s generally not helpful
                    and is really only self-serving. What is the right thing
                    to do isn't always clear at all. Day by day, we take action
                    to protect both ourselves and our herds, but always work
                    with the knowledge that when large carnivores and livestock
                    share the same range, some livestock will die, as will some
                    predators.
                    ... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  8/24/13: Wisconsin
                            wolf hunt: 16,672 applicants (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Wisconsin's wolf hunting season
                    drew 16,672 applicants for the quota of about 250 wolves
                    in the 2013-2014 wolf hunting and trapping season, which
                    beings Oct. 15 and runs through Feb. 28, or until specific
                    quotas are reached in each zone. State officials set last
                    year's total quota at 201, and when the year was complete,
                    total licensed harvest was 117 wolves, but a total of 243
                    wolves were killed (including illegal kills, vehicle collisions,
                    and depredation control). ... (Click on
                    the link above for the complete story.)
  8/20/13: Two
                            more wolves killed in Wyoming (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Idaho media outlets are reporting
                    that a pack of wolves is responsible for the death of 176
                    sheep in an event over the weekend. The Teton Valley News
                    reports the location of the sheep kill as six miles south
                    of Victor, Idaho.... (Click on
                    the link above for the complete story.)
  8/20/13: Idaho
                            wolves kill 176 sheep (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Idaho media outlets are reporting
                    that a pack of wolves is responsible for the death of 176
                    sheep in an event over the weekend. The Teton Valley News
                    reports the location of the sheep kill as six miles south
                    of Victor, Idaho.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  8/16/13: Plan
                            to delist wolves put on hold (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Los Angeles Times reports that
                    the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service plan to 
                    delist wolves throughout the nation (with the exception of
                    the Mexican wolf) 
                    has been put on hold due to problems in the process of scientific
                    review of the 
                    proposal
                    ... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  8/16/13: Wyoming
                            Wolf Update (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Wyoming Game and Fish Department
                    reports that there have been 33 
                    livestock and dogs verified as killed or injured by wolves
                    classified as trophy 
                    game animals since Jan. 1, 2013. Fourteen wolves classified
                    as trophy game 
                    animals have been removed in control actions during the same
                    period. The 
                    agency does not tally livestock losses outside the trophy
                    game area. In addition, 23 wolves have been killed thus far
                    this year in portions of the state where wolves are listed
                    as predatory animals.                    .... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  8/12/13: Earth
                            First touts wolf hunt sabotage (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Radical environmental group, ‘Earth
                    First!’ is touting a manual which provides detailed
                    information for disrupting wolf hunting in those states that
                    allow legal wolf hunting. The publication of the text, which
                    was sent to Earth First! Media by unknown persons calling
                    themselves "the Redneck Wolf Lovin’ Brigade," is
                    being published electronically at Earth First! News and is
                    being offered for others to print and distribute. Titled “The
                    Earth First! Wolf Hunting Sabotage Manual”, the text,
                    complete with step-by-step graphics, explains how to find
                    and destroy wolf traps, handle live trapped wolves in order
                    to release them, and various methods, including the use of
                    air-compressed horns and smoke-bombs, for stopping wolf hunts.
                    Over its 33-year history, Earth First! activists have used
                    hunt sabotage to disrupt hunts across the country. On the
                    legal side of this, Wyoming statutes provide that it is a
                    crime to prevent or hinder the lawful taking of wildlife.
                    Any organization or association which counsels or solicits
                    its members or others to violate the law is guilty of a misdemeanor
                    punishable by a fine of not more than ten thousand dollars
                    ($10,000.00). Each subsequent violation is punishable by
                    a fine of not more than fifty thousand dollars ($50,000.00)..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  8/8/13: Wyoming
                            wolf kill: 23 (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Twenty-three wolves have been killed
                    in Wyoming's predator zone so far in 2013. Nearly all of
                    Wyoming’s wolves are in the northwest corner of the
                    state, within the trophy game area - not in the predator
                    zone. Wyoming Game & Fish notes that approximately 92%
                    of the wolves in Wyoming are in the Wolf Trophy Game Management
                    Area/Seasonal Wolf Trophy Game Management Area, where they
                    are intensively monitored and managed through regulated hunting
                    seasons. At the end of 2012, WG&F estimated there were
                    at least 277 wolves in the state, in 43 packs, with 10 of
                    those packs located inside Yellowstone National Park, and
                    2 packs on the Wind River Indian Reservation..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  7/16/13: Wolf
                            chases bicyclist (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  A man on a long-distance bicycle
                    trek along the Alaska Highway was chased and attacked by
                    a wolf earlier this week, despite his attempts to halt the
                    attack by shooting bursts of bear spray in the animal’s
                    face. The man was finally rescued by passing motorists. His
                    harrowing encounter was the subject of several news accounts.... (Click on the link
                    above for the complete story.)
  7/16/13: Minnesota
                            wolf population above objective (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Minnesota’s wolf population
                    has declined, but remains above the state’s population
                    objectives. The state has at least 428 wolf packs, with 2,211
                    wolves...... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  7/16/13: Montana’s
                            wolf harvest proposal approved (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Montana hunters and trappers who
                    target wolves will face a longer season and more liberal
                    restrictions in the next harvest, including being able to
                    take up to five wolves. The proposed regulations generated
                    a great deal of controversy at a recent Montana Fish & Wildlife
                    Commission meeting. ..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  7/16/13: Utah
                            audits anti-wolf campaign (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Associated Press reports that
                    Yellowstone National Park officials view Montana’s
                    wolf hunting and trapping efforts as an attempt to reduce
                    the wolf population in the national park...... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  7/16/13: Yellowstone
                            wants curbs on Montana wolf harvest (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Associated Press reports that
                    Yellowstone National Park officials view Montana’s
                    wolf hunting and trapping efforts as an attempt to reduce
                    the wolf population in the national park...... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  7/3/13: States
                            pushed for lesser wolf protections (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Associated Press reports that
                    western wildlife officials met privately to request federal
                    officials lessen protections for wolves in western states
                    - specifically in Utah and Colorado..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  7/3/13: Idaho
                            wolf/livestock conflicts rise (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Even though more than 400 wolves
                    were killed in Idaho last year (330 by hunters, and 73 in
                    state control efforts), wolf depredations on livestock in
                    that state reached record high levels in 2012, with 90 cattle
                    and 251 sheep confirmed as killed by wolves..... (Click on
                    the link above for the complete story.)
  6/27/13: Mexican
                            wolf pair will not be released (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Federal wildlife officials have
                    decided not to release a pair of Mexican wolves from an acclimation
                    pen in Arizona’s Apache National Forest they’ve
                    been inhabiting the last two months. The wolves were placed
                    there in preparation for release into what was believed to
                    be uninhabited wolf habitat. But as it turns out, another
                    pair of Mexican wolves is using the area, and have approached
                    the pen, behaving aggressively toward its occupants. The
                    penned pair will now be placed back into another captive
                    facility, in hopes they will contribute to the population
                    at a later date..... (Click on the link above
                    for the complete story.)
  6/27/13: Nineteen
                            wolves killed in 2013 (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Nineteen wolves have been killed
                    in Wyoming’s predator zone thus far in 2013, according
                    to a report from the Wyoming Game and Fish Department. The
                    agency updates its wolf harvest summary information as new
                    kills are reported, and the current tally is dated June 11,
                    2013.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  6/21/13: Wolf
                            chases motorcyclist (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  A motorcyclist testing a new bike in Kootenay
                    National Park, Alberta nearly hit a wolf in the roadway,
                    but swerved to avoid the animal. The man turned around and
                    approached that area of the highway with his camera in hand,
                    only to have the wolf jump back onto the highway and began
                    chasing the bike. The wolf crossed a line of traffic to pursue
                    the motorcycle, and the motorcyclist was able to snap pictures
                    of the animal in hot pursuit, ears flattened against its
                    head, running at full speed. The bike eventually outran the
                    animal, and the motorcyclist appeared to have enjoyed the
                    encounter, likening the wolf to his pet dog that liked to
                    chase bikes. Wildlife managers at Parks Canada took a different
                    view, noting that the animal appeared to be habituated, causing
                    concern for wildlife managers.... (Click on the
                    link above for the complete story.)
  6/9/13: FWS
                            proposed wolf delisting (By U.S. Fish & Wildlife
                    Service)  The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed
                    to remove the gray wolf (Canis lupus) from the list of threatened
                    and endangered species. The proposal comes after a comprehensive
                    review confirmed its successful recovery following management
                    actions undertaken by federal, state and local partners following
                    the wolf’s listing under the Endangered Species Act
                    over three decades ago. The Service is also proposing to
                    maintain protection and expand recovery efforts for the Mexican
                    wolf (Canis lupus baileyi) in the Southwest, where it remains
                    endangered.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  5/29/13: Minnesota
                            wolf lawsuit tossed (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Wolf activists contesting Minnesota's
                    wolf hunting and trapping regulations were deemed by a state
                    appeals court to lack standing to bring the lawsuit and the
                    case was dismissed by the court. The court decision noted "it
                    is apparent that petitioners’ disagreement is with
                    the legislature’s policy decision to permit wolf hunting.
                    Such a disagreement does not present a controversy for judicial
                    review of the rules that effectuate that legislative decision. "In
                    sum, petitioners do not assert that the wolf rules cause
                    unique harm to their aesthetic interest in wolves or the
                    unlawful use of public funds. Petitioners therefore lack
                    standing to challenge the wolf rules in this court."... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  5/29/13: Oregon
                            reaches deal on wolf kills (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Oregon wildlife officials have
                    reached a settlement agreement with wolf activists over how
                    problem wolves are dealt with. Under the deal, lethal control
                    is a last resort. Non-lethal measures must be used first
                    and attacks on livestock must be deemed "chronic" before
                    a wolf can be killed..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  5/24/13: Wolf
                            delisting decision delayed (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Associated
                    Press reports that federal wildlife officials have postponed
                    a decision on whether to remove protections for wolves across
                    the Lower 48 states (excluding Mexican wolves in the southwest)...... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  5/24/13: Washington
                            turns to conflict prevention (By Washington
                    Department of Fish & Wildlife)  Washington Governor
                    Jay Inslee signed legislation that will provide state wildlife
                    managers more resources to prevent wolf-livestock conflict
                    and expand criteria for compensation to livestock owners
                    for wolf-related losses. Senate Bill 5193, requested by the
                    Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) and prime-sponsored
                    by Sen. John Smith, R-Colville, was supported by a broad
                    cross-section of interest groups. The bill received bipartisan
                    support from legislators across the state. It attempts to
                    minimizing wolf-livestock conflict while recognizing the
                    need for fair compensation to ranchers and farmers..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  5/24/13: One
                            wolf lawsuit dropped, one remains (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Associated Press reports
                    that activist organizations have filed a motion to drop their
                    lawsuit over wolf delisting in Wyoming that had been filed
                    in federal court in Wyoming. In response, the Wyoming Attorney
                    General filed a motion to continue the lawsuit over wolf
                    management in Wyoming. With this lawsuit not going forward,
                    that means there is one lawsuit remaining - one that will
                    be heard by a federal court in Washington, D.C.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  5/17/13: Group
                            wants wolf protection in parkway (By National Parks
                    Conservation Association)  The National Parks Conservation
                    Association filed a petition that asks the National Park
                    Service to start a rulemaking process that will eliminate
                    the possibility of a hunt of gray wolves inside the John
                    D. Rockefeller, Jr. Memorial Parkway in Wyoming. The Parkway,
                    a unit of the National Park System, connects Yellowstone
                    and Grand Teton National Parks. It serves as the connection
                    for the wolf packs inhabiting those parks. The group wants
                    this place set aside to preserve wildlife... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  5/17/13: Montana
                            issues statement about rancher who shot wolf (By Montana Fish,
                    Wildlife and Parks)  The Gardiner area landowner
                    who lost thirteen of his sheep to wolves late last month
                    has asked Fish, Wildlife and Parks to amend his shoot on
                    sight permit granting permission to take a second wolf. The
                    landowner says he will be shipping his cow/calf pairs which
                    were grazing in the area of the depredation to summer pasture
                    in another location at the end of the week, while his remaining
                    live sheep were moved immediately following the depredation
                    event. Therefore, the landowner says there will no longer
                    be a need for the permit..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  5/17/13: Wolf
                            and grizzly trapping in Pinedale region (By Wyoming Game
                    and Fish Department)  As part of ongoing efforts to
                    monitor the population of gray wolves in northwest Wyoming,
                    the Wyoming Game and Fish Department will conduct scientific
                    trapping operations in the northern Wind River Mountains
                    and Gros Ventre Mountains north of Pinedale and east of Bondurant.
                    Trapping will begin after May 19, 2013 and may continue through
                    August 31, 2013. Also, as part of ongoing efforts to monitor
                    the population of grizzly bears in the Yellowstone Ecosystem,
                    WG&F will conduct research trapping operations north
                    and west of Pinedale beginning after May 19 and may continue
                    through September 31, 2013.. (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  5/10/13: WG&F
                            starts wolf trapping (By Wyoming Game
                    and Fish Department)  As part of ongoing efforts to
                    monitor the population of gray wolves in northwest Wyoming,
                    the Wyoming
                    Game and Fish Department will conduct scientific trapping
                    operations in the Gros Ventre mountain range southeast of
                    Jackson. Trapping will begin May 14, 2013 and may continue
                    through June 15, 2013. All major access points where trapping
                    is being conducted for monitoring purposes will be marked
                    with warning signs. It is critical that members of the public
                    heed these signs and do not venture into posted areas.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  5/10/13: Washington
                            takes action to reduce wolf attacks (By Washington
                    Department of Fish and Wildlife)  The Washington Department
                    of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) enacted an emergency rule to
                    permit ranchers, farmers, and other pet and livestock owners
                    in the eastern third of the state to kill a wolf that is
                    attacking their animals. The commission is striving to address
                    the legitimate need of residents to protect their domestic
                    animals
                    without undermining the state’s long-term goal of supporting
                    the recovery of gray wolves. Without the emergency rule,
                    animal owners would have had to obtain a "caught in
                    the act" permit from the WDFW director before lethally
                    removing a wolf. "Wolf populations are increasing faster
                    than anyone had imagined," the legislators said in their
                    April 23 letter. Legislators urged the commission to act
                    quickly "to
                    maintain social tolerance for gray wolves in northeast Washington
                    in the timeliest manner for residents."..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  5/10/13: Elk
                            Foundation intervenes in wolf case (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  While Wyoming works to reduce the
                    number of wolves allowed for harvest by hunters this fall,
                    Montana is working to increase the limit from one to five
                    animals in that state's hunt..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  5/10/13: Montana
                            proposes expanded wolf hunt (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  While Wyoming works to reduce the
                    number of wolves allowed for harvest by hunters this fall,
                    Montana is working to increase the limit from one to five
                    animals in that state's hunt..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  5/10/13: Montana
                            man kills sheep-killing Yellowstone wolf (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  A Gardiner, Montana man has killed
                    a wolf that came out of Yellowstone National Park and onto
                    his private property. The killing was in the wake of about
                    a dozen of his sheep being killed by wolves two weeks ago.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  5/10/13: Wolf
                            researchers advocate intervention (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The New York Times has published
                    an editorial by three researchers whose work has focused
                    on the wolves of Isle Royale National Park, documenting the
                    inbreeding and decline of that wolf population that was originally
                    established by wolves traversing ice from the mainland. Now
                    that the population is in decline, the researchers are advocating
                    that action be taken to "reintroduce" wolves onto
                    the island where a known population already exists – an
                    island that also happens to be a wilderness area, where nature
                    is supposed to take its course. Rather than documenting what
                    happens next in this natural drama, researchers want to actively
                    manipulate the situation...... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  4/30/13: Sixteen
                            Wyoming wolves harvested in 2013 (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Sixteen wolves have been killed
                    in Wyoming's predator zone as of April 26, 2013, according
                    to the Wyoming Game and Fish Department. Hunting within the
                    trophy game area is currently closed, and the 2013 hunting
                    seasons will be set by the WG&F Commission in July 2013.
                    Last year there were 42 wolves killed in the trophy game
                    season, and an additional 25 wolves killed in the predator
                    zone. There were also two wolves illegally killed after the
                    hunt areas were closed in 2012..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  4/28/13: Wolf
                            data deserves scrutiny (By Idaho Farm
                    Bureau Federation)  The Idaho Farm Bureau Federation
                    (IFBF) questions the wolf population data being released
                    by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS). Despite known
                    sightings
                    and depredation reports of wolves, the USFWS recent report
                    claims there are no wolves in northern Utah, southwest Wyoming
                    or
                    southern Idaho. IFBF  says USFWS documents only 
                    a small proportion of actual livestock losses in these states.
                     “It's been estimated that only one in nine livestock
                     depredations by wolves are confirmed by USFWS. 
                     IFBF also asserts wolf populations may be higher than what
                     are counted due to difficulties associated with
                     obtaining accurate population estimates in the field.  IFBF
                    says they question the validity of the entire USFWS report: “It's
                    time for USFWS to get serious about telling the truth about
                    wolves.”..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  4/28/13: Feds
                            plan wolf releases in NM, AZ (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Federal wildlife officials will
                    soon be releasing two pairs of Mexican gray wolves in Arizona
                    and New Mexico. One pair is being held in a holding pen in
                    Arizona while they acclimate to the area. The other pair
                    is being held in a backcountry pen in the Gila Wilderness
                    in New Mexico and "will be able to chew their way out
                    of the enclosure," according to a Seattle Post Intelligence..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  4/28/13: RMEF
                            moves to intervene in wolf delisting lawsuit (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation
                    (RMEF) has filed a motion to intervene in the Wildearth Guardians
                    et al., lawsuit over wolf delisting in Wyoming. This is the
                    case that will be argued in federal court in Wyoming. The
                    RMEF seeks to intervene in this action to protect its specific
                    interest in defending the US Fish & Wildlife Service’s
                    decision to remove protection of the gray wolf under the
                    Endangered Species Act, the decision to create two zones
                    of gray wolf management in the State of Wyoming, and in preserving
                    populations of elk, deer, moose, wild sheep, and other big
                    game species that are being impacted by wolf predation.  
                    If the court allows RMEF to intervene in the case on the
                    side of federal officials, this wildlife non-profit will
                    join a growing list of intervenors, including the State of
                    Wyoming, Wyoming Wolf Coalition 2013, Safari Club International,
                    and the National Rifle Association.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  4/28/13: Feds
                            plan wolf releases in NM, AZ (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Federal wildlife officials will
                    soon be releasing two pairs of Mexican gray wolves in Arizona
                    and New Mexico. One pair is being held in a holding pen in
                    Arizona while they acclimate to the area. The other pair
                    is being held in a backcountry pen in the Gila Wilderness
                    in New Mexico and "will be able to chew their way out
                    of the enclosure," according to a Seattle Post Intelligence..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  4/28/13: Feds
                            plan US wolf delisting (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Los Angeles Times obtained
                    a draft U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service document indicating
                    the federal wildlife agency plans to remove endangered species
                    protections for all gray wolves in the Lower 48 states, with
                    the exception of wild Mexican wolves in Arizona and New Mexico..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  4/17/13: Wyoming
                            wolf case stays in DC (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The federal lawsuit over removing
                    Wyoming wolves from the list of federally protected species
                    filed by Defenders of Wildlife, The Humane Society of the
                    United States, and other animal activists was filed in Washington
                    DC, and will remain there, according to an order from a federal
                    judge. Federal officials had tried to have the case moved
                    to federal court in Wyoming, but the judge denied the motion.
                    The court concluded: “the national interest in gray
                    wolf preservation and the substantial deference owed to plaintiffs’ choice
                    of forum tip the balance of the relevant factors against
                    transfer.”The court noted that when considering
                    the public interest, there is legitimate reason in “having
                    localized controversies decided at home,” in this case
                    it does not apply “because this case implicates national
                    concerns.”.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  4/17/13: 2012
                            Northern Rockies Wolf Report (By U.S. Fish & Wildlife
                    Service)  The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
                    in collaboration with other federal, state and tribal agencies,
                    released the 2012 Annual Report for the Northern Rocky Mountain
                    (NRM) Gray Wolf Population. The report is conducted as part
                    of the Service’s work to monitor the wolf population
                    to ensure that it continues to thrive under professional
                    state management and no longer needs federal protection under
                    the Endangered Species Act. As of Dec. 31, 2012, there were
                    at least 321 confirmed packs and 1,674 wolves within the
                    NRM area. The 2011 report showed at least 287 confirmed packs
                    and 1,796 wolves within the NRM area. Post-delisting monitoring
                    requires each delisted state to submit an annual report to
                    the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The Director of US Fish
                    and Wildlife Service, Dan Ashe, called the recovery of the
                    gray wolf in the Northern Rockies one of the great success
                    stories of the Endangered Species Act. Despite increased
                    levels of take resulting from sport hunting and control efforts,
                    the population has continued to thrive. The Service will
                    continue to monitor the delisted wolf populations in the
                    NRM states for a minimum of five years to ensure that they
                    continue to sustain their recovery. .... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  4/15/13: WG&F
                            proposes to cut wolf quota by half (By Wyoming Game
                    and Fish Department)  Officials with the Wyoming Game
                    and Fish Department say the state's efforts at wolf management
                    to date have been successful. The report shows a nearly 12
                    percent increase in the number of wolf packs since 2011.
                    The recovery plan criteria for removing wolves from the federal
                    Endangered
                    Species List
                    in Wyoming was 100 individual wolves and 10 breeding pairs
                    at the end of any given year. At the end of 2012, there were
                    an estimated minimum of 277 wolves in all areas of Wyoming,
                    including 43 packs and 21 breeding pairs. The recovery plan
                    criteria for removing wolves from the federal Endangered
                    Species List in Wyoming was 100 individual wolves and 10
                    breeding pairs at the end of any given year. Year-end 2012
                    was the 11th consecutive year that Wyoming has exceeded those
                    criteria. As a whole, all jurisdictions in Wyoming are required
                    to maintain at least 150 wolves and 15 breeding pairs. The
                    state of Wyoming has agreed to maintain a minimum of 100
                    wolves and 10 breeding pairs towards this total in areas
                    where it has management authority. The Endangered Species
                    Act requires a five-year post-delisting monitoring period.
                    Failure to meet the established recovery goals could jeopardize
                    the legal status of Wyoming's wolves. Since Wyoming achieved
                    wolf management goals of a reduced population through hunting
                    and control actions in 2012, reductions in 2013 will be more
                    conservative. The total hunting quota in the Wolf Trophy
                    Game Management Area and Seasonal Wolf Trophy Game Management
                    Area in 2012 was 52 wolves. In 2013, the department is proposing
                    reducing this quota to 26. During the 2012 wolf hunting season,
                    the WGFD sold 4,492 wolf hunting licenses. A total of 41
                    wolves were legally harvested in the Wolf Trophy Game Management
                    Area and Seasonal Wolf Trophy Game Management Area; 25 wolves
                    were harvested in areas of the state where wolves are designated
                    as predatory animals.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  4/10/13: Fourteen
                            Wyoming wolves harvested in 2013 (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Fourteen wolves have been killed
                    in Wyoming's predator zone as of March 29, 2013, according
                    to the Wyoming Game and Fish Department. Hunting within the
                    trophy game area is currently closed, and the 2013 hunting
                    seasons will be set by the WG&F Commission in July 2013.
                    Last year there were 42 wolves killed in the trophy game
                    season, and an additional 25 wolves killed in the predator
                    zone. There were also two wolves illegally killed after the
                    hunt areas were closed in 2012.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  4/3/13: Idaho
                            releases wolf monitoring report (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The number of wolves in Idaho at
                    the end of 2012 was down from the year before, at an estimated
                    683 animals (compared to 768 the year before). That's according
                    to figures released by the Idaho Department of Fish and Game
                    in its 2012 wolf monitoring report..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  3/27/13: Lowest
                            wolf count on Isle Royale (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The most recent annual report of
                    ecological studies of wolves on Isle Royale reveals that
                    there are only eight wolves left in this unique population.
                    From mid-January to late February 2013, researchers conducted
                    the fifty-fifth annual Winter Study of wolves and moose on
                    Isle Royale. Between January 2012 and January 2013, the wolf
                    population declined from 9 to 8, the lowest number of wolves
                    ever observed in the population. During the past year, mortality
                    rates were low (11%), with just one wolf dying. There was
                    no evidence of any reproduction during the past year. This
                    is the first year in the project’s history researchers
                    have been unable to document reproduction. Analysis of DNA
                    extracted from wolf scat collected in January and February
                    2012, and the pattern of mortality during the past year,
                    indicate that the population is comprised of between three
                    and five females. The lack of reproduction is not due to
                    a shortage of females..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  3/27/13: Wolf-dog
                            hybrid in New Mexico (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  With so few Mexican wolves remaining
                    in the wild, it's no wonder that every now and then wildlife
                    managers discover the animals have bred with domestic dogs.
                    Federal wildlife managers recently discovered what they believe
                    to be a wolf-dog hybrid..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  3/24/13: Wyoming
                            wolf lawsuit grows (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Wyoming Wolf Coalition has
                    been granted intervenor status in the federal lawsuit challenging
                    the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service decision to delist wolves
                    in the state. Meanwhile, a coalition of hunting advocates
                    are awaiting word whether they will be allowed to intervene
                    as well...... (Click on the
                    link above for the complete story.)
  3/24/13: Montana
                            wolf numbers down slightly (By Montana Fish,
                    Wildlife and Parks)  At least 625 wolves inhabited
                    Montana at the end of 2012, according to state wildlife managers
                    preparing the federally required annual wolf conservation
                    and management report. Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks'
                    complete report, which is expected to be available online
                    by April 12, will show that Montana's verified minimum wolf
                    count decreased more than 4% in 2012, compared to a 15% increase
                    in 2011 and an 8% increase in 2010. The minimum wolf count
                    is the number of wolves actually verified by FWP wolf specialists.
                    Confirmed livestock depredations due to wolves included 67
                    cattle, 37 sheep, one dog, two horses and one llama in 2012.
                    Cattle losses in 2012 were the lowest recorded in the past
                    six years.... (Click on the
                    link above for the complete story.)
  3/24/13: Bitterroot
                            Valley of Montana home to 13 packs of wolves (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Montana's Bitterroot Valley is
                    home to 13 packs of wolves. That's up two packs from the
                    year before..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  3/17/13: Canadian
                            wolf attack (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Canada media sources report that
                    a woman was attacked by a wolf near Grand Rapids, Manitoba.
                    The woman, who sustained puncture wounds to her neck, drove
                    herself to the hospital for treatment...... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  3/17/13: America's
                            Wolf Dilemma (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  British journalist Jim Wickens
                    spent a week traveling Montana trying to learn about America's
                    conflicts over wolves and wolf management, with the end result
                    a piece published in The Ecologist..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  3/11/13: Wolf
                            spotted at Idaho's Craters (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  A remote camera captured images
                    of a wolf at Craters of the Moon National Monument in Idaho.
                    Although one wolf was confirmed in the area in December 2012,
                    more recent images have confirmed two wolves roam the area..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  3/6/13: Montana
                            wolf harvest numbers (By Montana Fish,
                    Wildlife and Parks)  State wildlife officials released
                    the results of the 2012-2013 wolf hunting and trapping seasons,
                    which saw a substantial jump in harvest over last year. The
                    wolf hunting and trapping seasons ended with a total harvest
                    of 225 wolves, 36% more than last season. Hunters took 128
                    wolves and trappers 97. The hunting season ran 181 days from
                    September 1, 2012 through February 28, and the 76-day trapping
                    season opened Dec. 15, 2012 and closed Feb. 28..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  3/6/13: Alaska
                            biologists shooting wolves (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Wildlife
                    biologists working for the Alaska Department of Fish & Game
                    have been shooting wolves from a helicopter in attempt to
                    reduce the wolf population to help the local moose population.
                    Villagers are allowed to keep the wolf carcasses. State officials
                    expect to harvest 35-50 wolves in the area this year, and
                    15-20 wolves annually thereafter..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  3/6/13: Idaho
                            wolf seasons closing (By Idaho Fish & Game)  Gray wolf hunting and trapping
                    seasons in most zones in Idaho run through March 31. Hunting
                    seasons in the Lolo and Selway zones remain open through
                    June 30. And the Beaverhead and Island Park zones closed
                    January 31. As of March 4, hunters and trappers had taken
                    245 wolves in Idaho. Last year, they had taken a total of
                    379 wolves by the end of the season..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/27/13: Montana
                            wolves kill hunting dog (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Montana mountain lion hunters witnessed
                    a pack of wolves kill one of their hunting hounds that had
                    treed a lion east of Hamilton..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/22/13: Feds
                            agree to $380K attorney fees (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  Federal officials and environmental
                    groups "have engaged in good faith, confidential settlement
                    negotiations" that have resulted in an agreement for
                    the feds to pay the groups $380,000 to settle attorney fees.
                    The agreement stems from a lawsuit filed by the Greater Yellowstone
                    Coalition, Defenders of Wildlife, Natural Resources Defense
                    Council, Sierra Club, Humane Society of the United States,
                    etc. back in June 2009 challenging the delisting of wolves.
                    The federal court heard cross motions for summary judgment
                    five months later and eventually ruled that the environmental
                    groups were right in part and wrong in part. The feds appealed
                    the case to the Ninth Circuit where it was dismissed as moot..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/21/13: National
                            Elk Refuge learns to capture wolves (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!)  The Jackson Hole
                    News & Guide has a feature story about employees of the
                    National Elk Refuge getting a lesson in capturing wolves..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/21/13: YNP
                            presents wolf hunt info (By Yellowstone
                    National Park/National Park Service) Yellowstone National
                    Park article answering questions about how wolves are managed
                    in the Park, how hunting might affect wolf populations
                    in
                    the
                    park, thoughts on harvest of collared wolves, responding
                    to the question of why do people hunt wolves..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/13/13: New
                            Montana wolf hunt law in effect (By Montana Fish,
                    Wildlife and Parks) A wolf management bill was signed
                    into law by the state's new governor. The law will allow
                    hunters to purchase up to three wolf licenses and lowers
                    the price of a nonresident wolf license from $350 to $50.
                    The measure will also fortify state wildlife officials' science-based
                    efforts to manage Montana's recovered and growing wolf population. "This
                    legislation leaves management of the gray wolf where it belongs,
                    in the hands of scientists, not politicians," Gov. Steve
                    Bullock said..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/13/13: Wolves
                            target ailing moose population (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) The Jackson Hole News & Guide
                    reports that wolves inhabiting the northern section of Grand
                    Teton National Park are keying on the local moose population,
                    which is in decline.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/10/13: Yellowstone
                            bemoans wolf harvest (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) The San Francisco Chronicle reports
                    that Yellowstone National Park officials are scrambling to
                    keep their research projects alive in wake of the loss of
                    some of the collared research wolves leaving the park and
                    being legally harvested by hunters outside the parks. The
                    article claims that 12 percent of the park's wolf population
                    has been harvested by hunters, and that hunting by humans
                    is now replacing wolves killing other wolves as the leading
                    cause of park wolf mortality..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/9/13: Wyoming
                            wolf count nears completion (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) The Jackson Hole News & Guide
                    reports that state wildlife officials are wrapping up their
                    wolf population count, with the population expected to exceed
                    the state's population goals. 
                    The preliminary estimate is that the state has at least 170
                    wolves in 15 breeding pairs..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/9/13: Park
                            County joins wolf litigation (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Park County Commissioners have joined
                    the Wyoming Wolf Coalition, a group organized to support
                    the State of Wyoming and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife in supporting
                    the federal decision to remove endangered species protection
                    for wolves in Wyoming...... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/9/13: Montana
                            looks to expanded wolf hunt (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Montana legislators are fast-tracking
                    a bill that would expand wolf hunting in that state. The
                    bill would prohibit Montana wildlife officials from banning
                    wolf hunting in areas around national parks, and well as
                    increase the number of wolves one hunter can take, and allows
                    for the use of electronic calls..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/9/13: Sweden
                            backs off wolf hunt (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Sweden has suspended its proposed
                    cull of 16 inbred wolves after protests from wolf advocates.
                    Three wolves were killed before a court suspended the hunt,
                    pending the outcome of the lawsuit.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/7/13: Mexcian
                            wolf back in captivity (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) A male Mexican wolf released into
                    the wild in hopes it would breed with a wild female has been
                    recaptured and placed back into captivity since the plan
                    failed. Rejected by a wolf pack in Arizona, the male wandered
                    into New Mexico before federal officials brought the male
                    back into the captive breeding program.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/7/13: Sweden
                            hunts inbred wolves (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Swedish wildlife officials have
                    surprised wolf advocates by recently authorizing the "selected
                    and targeted" hunting of 16 inbred wolves for ""as
                    a step towards reducing inbreeding and having a sustainable,
                    healthy wolf population.".... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/7/13: Wolf
                            mortalities on Canadian highway (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Two wolves have been hit and killed
                    by vehicles on a highway in a Canadian national park in recent
                    weeks. The Calgary Herald reports that rangers were able
                    to move a third wolf away from the TransCanada Highway after
                    the wolf became entrapped in a fenced section of the highway.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/7/13: Animal
                            advocates want wolf hunt vote (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) The Humane Society of the United
                    States is leading an effort to have Michigan's wolf hunting
                    to be subject of a statewide vote. Hunting would be put on
                    hold until the outcome of the ballot initiative is known...... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/7/13: Germans
                            want to hunt wolves (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) German farmers want to wolves to
                    be subject to hunting, citing problems with the animals killing
                    domestic livestock. The wolf population in Germany is estimated
                    to be about 160 animals..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2/7/13: France
                            tests new wolf program (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Officials in France are hoping to
                    teach wolves not to eat livestock. They hope that by capturing
                    and marking wolves, the animals will be so traumatized that
                    they will avoid livestock in the future..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  1/31/13: Wyoming
                            wolf harvest continues (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Wolf hunters in Wyoming have harvested
                    six of the animals in the month of January in the predator
                    zone of the state. The wolf hunting season in the trophy
                    game areas of the state ended Dec. 31, 2012, with 42 animals
                    taken as part of the trophy hunt, and an additional 26 wolves
                    killed in the predator zone..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  1/20/13: WG&F
                            collars wolves in nine packs (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Washington wildlife officials say
                    eastern Washington's wolf numbers are rising, and state officials
                    are working to reduce the risks of conflicts with livestock
                    production in that region of the state.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  1/20/13: Washington
                            has 'unprecedented' wolf numbers (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Washington wildlife officials say
                    eastern Washington's wolf numbers are rising, and state officials
                    are working to reduce the risks of conflicts with livestock
                    production in that region of the state.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  1/20/13: Montana
                            judge allows wolf season to continue (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) A Montana judge has issued an injunction
                    allowing wolf harvest to continue outside Yellowstone National
                    Park's borders in Montana. Although Montana wildlife officials
                    had attempted to close the season, the way the state went
                    about doing so was deemed not in compliance with law..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  1/11/13: Wolf
                            lawsuit moved to Wyoming (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) A federal judge has issued an order
                    moving a lawsuit challenging the removal of federal protections
                    for wolves in Wyoming from his court in Colorado to Wyoming.
                    The request for change of venue was filed by both federal
                    and state officials. Wolf advocate and environmental groups
                    filed the lawsuit in federal court in Colorado last fall....... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  1/11/13: Court:
                            NPS right to deny wolf reintroduction (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals
                    in Denver has ruled that the National Park Service was right
                    in its rejection of the idea of reintroducing wolves to Rocky
                    Mountain National Park in order to reduce the elk population...... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  1/9/13: WG&F
                            seeks wolf poaching info (By Wyoming Game & Fish
                    Department) Wyoming Game and Fish Department
                    game wardens are looking for information about the illegal
                    killing of two gray wolves in the Gros Ventre area near Jackson.
                    One dead wolf, which had been shot, was found in the Gros
                    Ventre area in early December. A second wolf, which had also
                    been shot, was found on Dec. 21, several miles from the first
                    wolf carcass. The department requests the public’s
                    help with this investigation. Anyone with information about
                    this incident should call Wyoming’s Stop Poaching hotline
                    at 1-877-WGFD-TIP, report online at wgfd.wyo.gov,
                    or call Game Warden Bill Long at 307-733-2321. Those with
                    information can remain anonymous and may be eligible for
                    a reward... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  1/7/13: Russia
                            declares emergency over wolf attacks (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) The Siberian Republic of Yakutia
                    has declared a state of emergency due to attacks on livestock
                    by wolves. A program to reduce the wolf population by 3,000
                    is now being undertaken..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  1/4/13: Wyoming
                            wolf hunt season closes (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Hunters harvested 43 wolves of
                    the quota of 52 during the 2012 wolf hunting season in the
                    trophy game areas of western Wyoming, in addition to the
                    26 wolves killed in the predator zone. The hunting season
                    is now closed in the trophy game areas..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  1/4/13: Judge
                            orders Montana to reopen wolf season (By Montana Fish,
                    Wildlife and Parks) A district court judge reopened
                    wolf hunting and trapping seasons in two areas north of Yellowstone
                    National Park in Montana. The areas were closed by the Montana
                    Fish, Wildlife & Parks Commission on Dec. 10 in response
                    to concern that hunters were taking wolves with collars that
                    supplied scientific information to YNP researchers. The Order
                    suggested that Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks failed
                    to offer sufficient public notice about the closure. A hearing
                    has been set for Jan. 14. Montana's wolf hunting and trapping
                    seasons are open through Feb. 28..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  1/4/13: Wolves
                            in Polson, Montana (By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) A pair of wolves appears to have
                    taken up residence within the city limits of Polson, Montana,
                    preying on deer herds there. Residents have reported spotting
                    the wolves in their yards..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
  2012
                    Wolf Watch Story Archive 2011
                          Wolf Watch Story Archive 2010
                          Wolf Watch Story Archive 2009
                          Wolf Watch Story Archive 2008
                          Wolf Watch Story Archive  2007/2006
                        Wolf Watch Story Archive |