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                      by Cat UrbigkitWyoming 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.
 2015
                    Wolf Watch Story Archive   12/30/15:  Ranching
                            with wolves in California(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Northern California ranchers are
                    starting to learn what it's like to live with wolves. A pack
                    moved into Siskiyou County last summer and produced five
                    pubs, earning the group the name Shasta Pack. Now the state
                    has recorded its first "probable" wolf kill of
                    a beef calf. State wildlife officials have
                    drafted a conservation plan for wolves in California. The
                    plan includes various management options, and is open for
                    public comment to Feb. 15th.… (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 12/17/15:  Wolf
                            protections remain(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) The Congressional rider on the federal
                    spending bill that would have removed wolves from federal
                    protection in Wyoming and in the Great Lakes states was dropped
                    from the bill prior to its approval. That means that wolves
                    will remain under federal protection..… (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 12/15/15:  Yellowstone
                            wolves(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Yellowstone National Park officials
                    report that in December, 2014, the park harbored at least
                    104 wolves in 11 packs, including nine breeding pairs, according
                    to the park’s annual wolf report. Researchers monitoring
                    wolf-prey relationships indicate that wolves still prefer
                    elk, but predation in bison and mule deer appear to be increasing
                    within the park. Park officials also noted that there were
                    7 instances in 2014 when wolf behavior was considered habituated
                    or when wolves closely approached humans, involving four
                    different wolves..… (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 11/30/15:  Scientists
                            call for wolf delisting(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) A leading group of wolf scientists
                    are calling for wolves in the Great Lakes states to be removed
                    from federal protection, and managed by the states. The letter
                    comes nine months after another group of scientists and wolf
                    advocates penned a letter with the opposite viewpoint.… (Click on the
                    link above for the complete story.)
 11/30/15:  Wolf
                            killed in northern Utah(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Utah media outlets are reporting
                    that an 89-pound female wolf was found dead in a snare set
                    for coyotes in November, in an area near Utah's border with
                    Wyoming.… (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 11/30/15:  Wolf
                            delisting proposed in Senate(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) and Sen.
                    John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) introduced legislation in November
                    that directs the Secretary of the Interior to reissue final
                    rules related to the listing of the gray wolf in Wisconsin,
                    Michigan, Minnesota and Wyoming under the Endangered Species
                    Act of 1973. The bill serves as the Senate companion to the
                    bipartisan House bill introduced by Reps. Reid Ribble (R-Wis.)
                    and Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.) earlier this year.… (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 10/27/15:  Wolf
                            Control Assessment Released(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) USDA Wildlife Services has
                    released an environmental assessment for Gray Wolf Damage & Conflict
                    Management in Wyoming, and is accepting public comment on
                    the assessment through Nov. 24, 2015. The Wyoming Game & Fish
                    Department  and U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service 
                    have requested that WS continue its role as an agent of the
                    State for managing wolf conflicts. The EA examines three
                    possible alternatives. The primary need for action is the
                    need to reduce wolf predation on livestock and domestic animals.
                    Studies indicate that while nonlethal tools are temporarily
                    helpful in some situations, they were generally ineffective,
                    particularly in areas that simply would have too many livestock
                    conflicts for wolf packs to persist and in most circumstances,
                    lethal removal of wolves is usually the only practical approach
                    to resolving incidents of wolf predation on livestock… (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 10/18/15:  Wolf
                            News Roundup(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Support delisting? You're a "right-wing
                    wolf hater" according to the Center for Biological Diversity's
                    most recent fundraising email claiming "Right Wing Gunning
                    for Wyoming's Wolves." The email, adorned with a large
                    red "Donate Now" button, reads: "Wyoming's
                    wildlife-hating fanatics are doubling down on their war on
                    wolves. They're trying to slide through a congressional "rider" --
                    an amendment attached to a must-pass budget bill -- that
                    would overrule the courts and reinstate a "kill-on-sight" approach.
                    In a throwback to decades past, they want wolves reclassified
                    as vermin, to be shot or trapped the minute they step across
                    the state line, or outside of Yellowstone." The CBD
                    letter fails to acknowledge that once wolves are removed
                    from federal protection, they fall under state management
                    authority, with provisions for regulated harvest. Other wolf
                    news updates are also in this post..… (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 9/7/15:  Farmers
                            kidnap officials in French wolf dispute(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) The Telegraph (United Kingdom) reports
                    that a group of French farmers have kidnapped two national
                    park officials in the Alps, demanding the officials take
                    action to stop wolves from killing their livestock. According
                    to The Telegraph, "bossnapping" is not unheard
                    of in France, but this is reportedly the first instance an
                    official has been held over a dispute involving wolves. Wolves
                    have reportedly killed 8,500 sheep in France in the last
                    year, as well as six sheep guardian dogs..… (Click on the
                    link above for the complete story.)
 8/23/15:  Wolf
                            News Roundup(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Wolf news updates from Washington,
                    California, Black Hills, Isle Royale, and international.
                    Wolves attack livestock guardian dog in Washington – the
                    dog is protecting a herd of sheep that lost more than 200
                    sheep to wolves last year – state officials are struggling
                    whether to classify the incident as a “depredation.” California
                    has caught five wolf pups on a wildlife camera in northern
                    California. A wolf was photographed in the Black Hills of
                    South Dakota at an undisclosed location. Isle Royale (in
                    Michigan) has evidence of two new pups added to their wolf
                    population. Sweden and Switzerland struggle with wolf depredations
                    on livestock and scrutiny and criticism of their wolf management
                    programs.… (Click on the link
                    above for the complete story.)
 8/11/15:  Western
                            Wolf News Roundup(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Wolf populations in Oregon, Washington
                    and California appear to be increasing with data on confirmed
                    wolf pairs and packs in the western states. Washington state
                    ranchers, as well as some in Idaho, have taken different
                    approaches to managing their livestock in the presence of
                    wolves… (Click on
                    the link above for the complete story.)
 7/21/15:  Wolf
                            control in Wyoming(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Federal wildlife officials have
                    destroyed 16 wolves in Wyoming in 2015 in response to livestock
                    depredations. Two wolves were killed in the Upper Green River
                    region due to continued livestock depredations on cattle.
                    In May, six wolves were killed in the Gros Ventre due to
                    cattle depredations. In June, a wolf was killed in the Kaycee
                    area after predating on sheep. Half-dozen wolves were killed
                    in two separate control actions in Park County in 2015. So
                    far in 2015, FWS confirmed that 41 domestic sheep and 15
                    cattle were killed by wolves in the state, in addition to
                    five calves that were injured. FWS has one ongoing control
                    action for wolves that have repeatedly preyed on cattle in
                    the Dubois area.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 7/15/15:  Delisting
                            wolves update(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Most recent American news items
                    for wolves have little to do with the animals themselves,
                    and instead focus on disputes over managing the predators... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 6/10/15:  Delisting
                            wolves update(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) One June 9, the Interior and Environment
                    Appropriations Subcommittee released its draft bill for FY2016.
                    Included in the legislation is a rider which would require
                    the Secretary of the Interior to delist gray wolves in Wyoming,
                    Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan from the list of endangered
                    species. This rider, Section 121 of the Interior and Environment
                    Appropriations bill, provides for the delisting of gray wolves
                    and would prohibit that rule from being subjected to future
                    judicial review. Last year, a federal judge ordered that
                    gray wolves in Wyoming and the Great Lakes region be returned
                    to the list of endangered species..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 6/10/15:  Arizona
                            sues over wolf recovery(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Arizona wildlife officials have
                    filed a lawsuit in federal court against the U.S. Fish & Wildlife
                    Service over recovery of Mexican wolves. The lawsuit seeks
                    an updated wolf recovery plan with specific guidelines for
                    when wolves can be removed from federal protection.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 6/10/15:                     Alta wolf pack kills sheep(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) A small flock of domestic sheep
                    on a farm near Alta, Wyoming has been the subject of unwanted
                    attention from federally protected wolves recently, with
                    16 sheep killed by two wolves. Federal officials are now
                    trying to locate and kill the two wolves involved in repeated
                    livestock depredations.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 5/29/15:  Wolf
                            killed in Colorado(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Federal officials have determined
                    that a coyote hunter shot and killed a gray wolf near Kremmling,
                    Colorado in late April. The animal was shot by a legal coyote
                    hunter, who immediately notified Colorado Parks and Wildlife,
                    which then notified the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The
                    gray wolf is protected by both the federal government and
                    the State of Colorado as an endangered species.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 5/17/15:  Wolf
                            depredation on cattle in Europe(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) A new report to the European Commission "Exploring
                    Traditional Husbandry Methods to Reduce Wolf Predation on
                    Free-Ranging Cattle in Portugal and Spain" offers a
                    look at the problems faced by livestock producers in this
                    region of the Iberian Peninsula, but does little to suggest
                    viable relief from problems specifically identified by cattle
                    producers. The paper acknowledges that "the economic
                    impact of wolf damages on cattle is high and is becoming
                    more
                      relevant in recent times since cattle numbers are getting
                      proportionally higher among livestock species."... (Click
                      on the link above for the complete story.)
 5/17/15:  Carnivore
                            Damage News(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) The Winter 2015 issue of Carnivore
                    Damage Prevention News provides a fascinating look into conflicts
                    between livestock and predators across Europe. Between 7,000
                    and 10,000 sheep are compensated each year as wolverine kills
                    in Norway. Under Swiss law, young men with "conscience
                    objections" to military service may substitute that
                    military service with "alternative civilian service." For
                    the last five years, that has meant serving as agricultural
                    workers (sheepherders) in areas where wolves cause conflicts
                    with livestock. A study in northwestern Switzerland found
                    that 153 sheep were killed in flocks that did not use livestock
                    guardian dogs, while protected herds suffered a total of
                    15 losses. .... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 5/15/15:  World
                            wolf news(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) News includes 6 hikers in the Israel-occupied
                    Golan heights attacked and bitten by a wolf; wolves released
                    in Arizona; The New Mexico Game and Fish Commission has denied
                    Ted Turner's request for renewal of a permit to hold Mexican
                    wolves as part of the federal recovery effort for the species.
                    The Turner Endangered Species Fund's Ladder Ranch Wolf Management
                    Facility has held such a permit for 17 years, and this is
                    the first time the application for a permit has been denied..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 5/15/15:  Wolf-Dog-Flock
                            Trinity(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Wolf researchers with the CanOvis
                    Project continue to study the relationships between wolves,
                    domestic sheep, and livestock guardian dogs in France. CanOvis
                    has prepared its annual report and findings from the 2014
                    field season. Every year since 2010, more than half of flocks
                    that are attacked experience it once per season, around a
                    third suffer two to five attacks, with around 10% suffering
                    six to 10 attacks and the rest suffering over 10 attacks.
                    Around 3% of flocks account for some 35% of victims compensated
                    in 2013. Field research is set to continue in 2015..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 4/20/15:  Men
                            accused of poaching wolves in Norway(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Six men went to court in what is
                    called a "landmark case that has gripped the country
                    of Norway. The men were accused of illegally killing wolves
                    in Europe's smallest wolf population. They have pled not
                    guilty to charges of illegal hunting, firearms offenses,
                    and organized crime. Five of the six men were found guilty,
                    with all sentenced to various terms in jail. The ringleader
                    was sentenced to one year and eight months in jail, while
                    the others were ordered to serve between six months and a
                    year. All the men denied the charges, and four of the men
                    have appealed the ruling..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 4/18/15:  Three
                            Wolves on Isle Royale(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Researchers have been able to locate
                    only three wolves on Isle Royale, the remote Minnesota island
                    15 miles from Lake Superior's northwest shoreline. The Isle
                    Royale wolf-moose research project is the world's longest
                    continuous study of predator-prey, now in its 57th year..... (Click on
                    the link above for the complete story.)
 4/17/15:  Dead
                            Wolf in Illinois(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) The Chicago Sun Times reports that
                    for the second time in a few months, a wolf has been found
                    dead in Illinois. The female wolf had been hit by a vehicle
                    on Interstate 55.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 4/15/15:  Spain's
                            Wolf Hunts(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Business news site Bloomberg has
                    published a feature article on wolf hunting in Spain, noting
                    that the economic slump has resulted in a severe price drop
                    in the cost of a wolf hunt. The article notes that nine years
                    ago, hunters paid about $16,000 to kill wolves in Spain,
                    but the cost is now only a quarter of that.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 4/15/15:  Wolves
                            attack sheep in French village(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) French press are reporting that
                    a wolf pack went on a livestock killing spree in a village
                    in the French Alps, killing nearly two dozen sheep just feet
                    from the mayor's house. The Local, an online French news
                    site, quoted the mayor as stressing just how close the wolves
                    had come to prowling the streets of the village, home to
                    about 1,600 people..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 4/15/15:  Biggest
                            Wolf Pack(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) The biggest pack of wolves in the
                    West currently is found in the Gros Ventre country about
                    30 miles northeast of Jackson, according to a new wolf monitoring
                    report. The Jackson Hole News & Guide reports that the
                    Lava Mountain pack of 12 wolves had a double litter last
                    year, bring the pack's numbers to 24. That's a formidable
                    force on the landscape..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 4/11/15:  Wolf
                            Population Tops 1,800(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Federal wolf recovery goals for
                    wolves in the Northern Rockies call for an equitably distributed
                    wolf population containing at least 300 wolves and 30 breeding
                    pairs in three recovery areas within Wyoming, Montana, and
                    Idaho. There are now a minimum of 1,800 wolves in more than
                    300 packs, roaming across five states (Wyoming, Montana,
                    and Idaho, plus Oregon and Washington), according to a new
                    report by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Federal funding
                    of more than $3.1 million was expended in 2014 on wolf monitoring,
                    management, control and research, according to the Northern
                    Rocky Mountain Wolf Recovery Program 2014 Interagency Annual
                    Report..... (Click on the link
                    above for the complete story.)
 3/10/15:  Idaho
                            wolf control actions(By Idaho Department
                    of Fish & Game) Idaho Fish and Game has completed
                    a wolf control action in northern Idaho's Lolo elk zone near
                    the Idaho/Montana border to improve poor elk survival in
                    the area. In February, Idaho Fish and Game requested USDA
                    Wildlife Services conduct a control action consistent with
                    Idaho's predation management plan for the Lolo elk zone,
                    where predation by several species is the major reason elk
                    population numbers are considerably below management objectives.
                    Ongoing wolf and elk research has shown that wolves have
                    become the primary predator impacting calf and cow elk survival
                    in the Lolo, contributing to a continual decline in total
                    elk population. The overall objective is to maintain a smaller,
                    but self-sustaining, population of wolves in the Lolo zone
                    to allow the elk population to increase.... (Click on the link
                    above for the complete story.)
 3/6/15:  Wolf
                            News Roundup(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Update on wolf news around the country
                    including pending legislation, fundraising by groups to keep
                    "hateful bullies in Congress" from putting more wolves in
                    harms way, attempts to downlist wolves rather than delist,
                    wolf hunting and trapping counts in Montana and Idaho, and
                    snowmobilers being kicked off trails in Voyageurs National
                    Park in Minnesota because of a wolf chasing and following
                    snowmobiles on several occasions.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 2/15/15:  Wolf
                            News Roundup(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) While the list of co-sponsors to
                    a Congressional bill that would remove federal protections
                    for wolves in the Great Lakes States and Wyoming grows to
                    an impressive bipartisan coalition, wolf advocates are suing
                    in an attempt to stop federal wildlife damage control activities
                    in Idaho. The lawsuit was filed by Western Watersheds Project,
                    Wildearth Guardians, Center for Biological Diversity, Friends
                    of the Clearwater and Project Coyote, against USDA Wildlife
                    Services and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. The lawsuit
                    seeks a temporary restraining order and/or a preliminary
                    injunction suspending animal damage control activities until
                    Wildlife Services prepares a full environmental impact statement
                    for its activities in Idaho. The case was filed in federal
                    district court in Idaho.... (Click on the link
                    above for the complete story.)
 2/12/15:  State
                            Wolf Management Bill Introduced(By U.S. Representative
                    Cynthia Lummis) U.S. Representatives Cynthia Lummis
                    (WY) and Reid Ribble (WI-08) introduced H.R 884, to direct
                    the Secretary of the Interior to reissue final rules relating
                    to listing of the gray wolf in the Western Great Lakes and
                    Wyoming under the Endangered Species Act of 1973.H.R. 884
                    would simply reinstate two decisions of the Fish and Wildlife
                    Service to delist the gray wolf from the Endangered Species
                    List and allow states to continue their successful population
                    management plans. The Endangered Species Act and the ability
                    of the Fish and Wildlife Service to re-list the gray wolf
                    in the case of future population changes are left entirely
                    intact.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 2/11/15:  Grand
                            Canyon wolf killed in Utah(By U.S. Fish & Wildlife
                    Service) After an extensive analysis by the University
                    of Idaho, it has been confirmed that the Gray Wolf killed
                    in Utah on December 28, 2014 is the same wolf seen in the
                    Grand Canyon area last year. Geneticists from the university’s
                    Laboratory for Ecological, Evolutionary, and Conservation
                    Genetics compared the DNA from the wolf killed in Utah with
                    samples taken from the wolf near the Grand Canyon. The results
                    were conclusive that it is the same wolf, identified by the
                    Service as 914F, which was collared near Cody, Wyoming on
                    January 8, 2014 and spotted in the Grand Canyon area in the
                    fall of last year.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 1/22/15:  Groups
                            seek to downlist wolves(By Center for
                    Biological Diversity) Animal protection and conservation
                    organizations petitioned the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
                    today to reclassify gray wolves under the Endangered Species
                    Act as threatened throughout the contiguous United States,
                    with the exception of the Mexican gray wolf, which remains
                    listed as endangered. If adopted the proposal would continue
                    federal oversight and funding of wolf recovery efforts and
                    encourage development of a national recovery plan for the
                    species, but would also give the Fish and Wildlife Service
                    regulatory flexibility to permit state and local wildlife
                    managers to address specific wolf conflicts...... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 1/22/15:  Wolf
                            News Roundup(By Cat Urbigkit,
                    Pinedale Online!) Congressional members from the Great
                    Lakes region have teamed up with U.S. Representative Cynthia
                    Lummis to draft a bill that would have Congress delist wolves
                    in Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Since wolves
                    have been granted federal protection under the Endangered
                    Species Act, only to be delisted and then relisted again
                    due to litigation – repeatedly – a congressional
                    fix that would preclude any further legal wrangling is being
                    pushed by states dealing with thriving wolf populations..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 1/22/15:  Killing
                            Wolves to Save Caribou(By Ministry of
                    Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations (British Columbia) The
                    British Columbia Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource
                    Operations is taking immediate action to save caribou herds
                    under threat from wolf predation in two separate and targeted
                    actions: one in the South Selkirk Mountains and the other
                    in the South Peace. The South Selkirk herd is at high risk
                    of local extinction. The population has declined from 46
                    caribou in 2009 to 27 in 2012, and to 18 as of March 2014.
                    Evidence points to wolves being the leading cause of mortality.
                    The South Selkirk is a trans-boundary herd, and caribou move
                    freely between B.C., Washington and Idaho. Officials from
                    B.C., Washington and Idaho States, First Nations, the U.S.
                    Forest Service and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have
                    been working together on a research project and have collared
                    six of the remaining 18 caribou to help investigate the cause
                    of decline. Wolves have killed two of the remaining caribou
                    (11% of the herd) in the past 10 months. Ministry staff will
                    aim to remove up to 24 wolves by shooting them from a helicopter
                    before snow melt.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
 2014
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