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                  12/27/18: Wolf News Roundup 12/27/18 
                  (By  Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)  The hunting season for wolves  in the trophy game area of northwestern Wyoming opened Sept. 1. According to  the Wyoming Game & Fish Department, 43 wolves have been harvested as of  December 26. The agency set a total quota of 58 wolves in the state’s 14 hunt  areas for wolves. The hunting season remains open until Dec. 31 or until  hunt-area quotas are reached. Currently, only three hunt areas have reached  their quotas. There have also been 36 wolves killed in Wyoming’s predator zone  so far in 2018. Yellowstone National Park has released its yearly wolf report,  tallying 97 wolves in 11 packs (including three breeding pairs) at the end of  December 2017. A collared wolf from Oregon crossed into California in early  December and was found deceased a few days later. The death is under a criminal  investigation.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
                 
                  12/16/18: Wolf News Roundup 12/16/18 
                  (By  Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)  The hunting season for wolves in the trophy game  area of northwestern Wyoming opened Sept. 1. According to the Wyoming Game  & Fish Department, 38 wolves have been harvested as of December 14. The  agency set a total quota of 58 wolves in the state’s 14 hunt areas for wolves.  The hunting season remains open until Dec. 31 or until hunt-area quotas are  reached. Currently, only one hunt area has reached its quota. There have also  been 36 wolves killed in Wyoming’s predator zone so far in 2018. Michigan Tech researchers report the discovery  of high amounts of red wolf ancestry in canids living on Galveston Island in  southeast Texas – an area where red wolves have been declared extinct in the  wild. ... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.) 
                  11/14/18: Transplanted wolf dead 
                  (By  National Park Service)  The National Park Service   has been monitoring four wolves that were captured in Minnesota earlier  this fall and transported and released on Isle Royale as part of a multi-year  project to restore predation in the remote park. Since the wolves arrived on  the island, park biologists have been tracking and monitoring their daily  movements using GPS technology. One of the wolves relocated to the park this  fall has died. There is no information on cause of the animal’s death. The  three remaining relocated wolves are doing well. They have occasionally been within 700 feet of each other  while exploring the island. The park is continuing with this project and is planning  relocation of additional wolves from Ontario in January..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)  
                  11/13/18: Wolf News Roundup 11/13/2018 
                  (By  Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) As of  November 11th, 27 wolves have been harvested in the trophy game area of northwestern Wyoming. The total quota is 58  wolves in Wyoming’s 14 hunt areas. The hunting season remains open until Dec. 31  or until hunt-area quotas are reached. Currently, only one hunt area has reached  its quota. There have also been 34 wolves killed in Wyoming’s predator zone so  far in 2018. Idaho allows both hunting and trapping seasons for wolves, and in  2017, harvested more than 280 wolves. Hunters and trappers may take up to five  wolves per person, per year in Idaho. After 7 years of harvest, quotas have never  been reached in Idaho, consequently, harvest quotas requirements were removed  beginning 2017. In Montana, hunters and trappers harvested 254 wolves in  Montana. There is no quota system in place for most of Montana’s wolf  management units, and hunters may take up to five wolves per person maximum.  There has been one wolf harvested from the three Montana hunt areas with  quotas..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.) 
                   
                  10/28/18: Wolf News Roundup 10/28/2018 
                  (By  Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The hunting season for wolves  in the trophy game area of northwestern Wyoming opened Sept. 1. According to  the Wyoming Game & Fish Department, 22 wolves have been harvested as of  Oct. 26. The agency set a total quota of 58 wolves in the state’s 14 hunt areas  for wolves. The hunting season remains open until Dec. 31 or until hunt-area  quotas are reached. There have also been 27 wolves killed in Wyoming’s predator  zone so far in 2018. In Washington state on Friday, Oct. 26, WDFW Director  Kelly Susewind reauthorized department staff to lethally remove the remaining  two wolves from a pack that has repeatedly preyed on cattle while occupying the  Old Profanity Territory (OPT) in the Kettle River Range of Ferry County. The  producer is transporting a portion of his cattle to private grazing lands west  of the Kettle Crest and another portion out of state. The private grazing lands  west of the Kettle Crest are within the OPT pack territory, although they are  at a lower elevations and on the periphery of the pack territory, which may  reduce the likelihood of wolf depredations in these areas this winter.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.) 
                   
                  10/15/18: Wolf News Roundup 10/15/2018 
                  (By  Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The hunting season for wolves in the trophy game area of  northwestern Wyoming opened Sept. 1. According to the Wyoming Game & Fish  Department, 16 wolves have been harvested as of Oct. 12. The agency set a total  quota of 58 wolves in the state’s 14 hunt areas for wolves. There have also  been 26 wolves killed in Wyoming’s predator zone so far in 2018. The Oregon  Department of Fish & Wildlife is working with ranchers and wolf advocates  to develop a new wolf plan that addresses both non-lethal and lethal control  measures for wolves that prey on livestock. The National Park Service announced  that the fall phase of the first year of its Isle Royale wolf translocation  project has been brought to a successful close with four wolves translocated to  the island from Minnesota..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.) 
                   
                  9/25/18: Wolves headed to Isle Royale 
                  (By  Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The National Park Service (NPS) announced Friday  the beginning of implementation of the Record of Decision of the Plan to  Address Wolf Presence on Isle Royale National Park that was signed in June.  This fall, the NPS working with partners and other agencies, plans to  translocate up to six wild wolves from the mainland to Isle Royale National  Park during the first phase of a three to five year effort to relocate up to  20-30 wolves to the isolated island park. This many wolves are needed to  establish adequate genetic variability to accomplish the overall goal of  restoring predation as a key part of the ecosystem on the island.... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.)  
                  9/22/18: Wolf News Roundup 9/22/2018 
                  (By  Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The hunting season for wolves in the trophy game area of  northwestern Wyoming opened Sept. 1. According to the Wyoming Game & Fish  Department, eight wolves have been harvested as of September 21. The agency set  a total quota of 58 wolves in the state’s 14 hunt areas for wolves. There have  also been 21 wolves killed in Wyoming’s predator zone so far in 2018.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.) 
                   
                  9/11/18: Wolf News Roundup 9/12/2018 
                  (By  Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The hunting season for wolves  in the trophy game area of northwestern Wyoming opened Sept. 1. According to  the Wyoming Game & Fish Department, five wolves have been harvested as of  September 10. The agency set a total quota of 58 wolves in the state’s 14 hunt  areas for wolves. There have also been 19 wolves killed in Wyoming’s predator  zone so far in 2018. A member of the Bow Valley wolf pack in Banff National  Park approached campers in a developed campground, prompting public safety  warnings by wildlife officials. The Bow Valley pack has a history of problem  wolf behavior, with Canada wildlife officials killing two members of the pack  in 2016 after the animals became aggressive towards humans. Between Sept. 5-7,  the Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife documented five confirmed wolf  depredations on calves in the territory formerly occupied by the Profanity Peak  pack. The depredations resulted in one dead and four injured calves.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.) 
                   
                  9/5/18: Wolf News Roundup 9/5/2018 
                  (By  Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) A male wolf from the Togo pack in  Washington has been removed by Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife for  repeated depredations on area livestock. The pack’s territory is just south of  the US-Canada border east of Danville. The wolf was collared, which provided  location data. The killing of the wolf was controversial and opposed by  environmental groups who went to court to stop the removal. Wolf managers have  confirmed the pack’s involvement in six separate depredation incidents since  November 2017. In Oregon, increasing wolf populations causing depredations on  livestock have concerned groups getting together to talk about wolf management...... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.) 
                 
                  9/4/18: Elk antlers as predator deterrants  
                  (By University of Montana) University  of Montana researchers and their partners recently published a study in Nature  Ecology and Evolution chronicling an evolutionary tie between wolves and when  bull elk shed their antlers. They discovered that wolves in Yellowstone  National Park preferentially hunted bulls who already had shed their antlers  over those who still had them during late winter. The finding suggests that  antlers are used for more than just competing for cows – that they help deter  predators, too – which could help explain why bulls shed their antlers long  after the rut. But as a whole, elk shed their antlers months later compared to  other North American deer species, and shedding is staggered over a two month  period beginning in March, suggesting there might be other reasons to keep  antlers around a little longer..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)  
                  9/4/18: Feds reject wolf depredation information request 
                  (By  Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) There  have been a record number of confirmed livestock depredations by wolves in  Idaho this year, but Western Watersheds Project (WWP) alleges that's because federal  animal damage control officials and ranchers are inflating the number of kills,  according to the Associated Press. WWP has filed a lawsuit seeking details of  the investigations of wolf kills on livestock, but federal officials have withheld  the information, stating that it is exempt under the federal Freedom of  Information Act..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.) 
                   
                  9/4/18: Togo pack update - Lethal control okayed 
                  (By Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife) A Thurston County Superior Court judge issued an  order permitting the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) to  initiate lethal action to remove the adult male wolf from a pack that has  repeatedly preyed on livestock in northeast Washington. Judge Carol Murphy denied a request  for a preliminary injunction by two environmental groups which would have prohibited  the wolf’s removal. In rejecting the plaintiffs’ request, Murphy said they had  not met the legal standard required for her to issue an injunction...... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.)  
                  8/29/18: Wolf News Roundup 8/29/2018 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) An unnamed U.S. Forest Service  worker in Washington state was put up a tree by a wolf and was eventually rescued by  a helicopter crew. Also in Washington, a rancher will forego his National  Forest grazing allotment next year due to wolf depredation on his cattle. The Arizona Game & Fish Department alleges that  placing Mexican wolves outside the species historic range will threaten its  recovery rather than help it claiming genetic mixing and hybridizing will  threaten the uniqueness of the Mexican wolf. Farmers there have been protesting  wolf protections in areas where wolves kill livestock, and where up at an  estimated 300 wolf packs roam...... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.)
                   
                  8/29/18: WA Togo Pack Saga  
                  (By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) A Ferry County, Washington rancher claims he recently  shot at a wolf in self-defense, and although state wildlife investigators were  initially unable to find evidence that the wolf had been shot, it was recently  confirmed that a wolf was indeed injured. The radio-collared male wolf is a  member of the Togo pack that has been involved in repeated livestock  depredations. State officials had issued a kill order on members of the pack,  but wolf advocates won a temporary restraining order to stop the lethal-control  action...... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.) 
                  8/23/18: Livestock-killing wolves safe, for now 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) A Thurston County Superior Court (Washington)  judge on Aug. 20, 2018, issued a temporary restraining order prohibiting the  Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) from lethally removing one or  more wolves from the Togo pack in northern Ferry County.
Earlier in the day, WDFW Director Kelly Susewind had authorized the staff to  take lethal action in response to multiple confirmed livestock depredations by  the pack since last November, including three confirmed incidents in the last  30 days..... .(Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.) 
                  8/23/18: Wolf News Roundup 8/23/2018 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Severe winter conditions proved to be difficult  for a small population of wood bison in Alaska, and wolves took advantage,  killing about one-quarter of a wintering herd of this large ungulate. In Oregon, the adult male wolf that made history by  crossing into California in 2011 has now sired his fifth litter of pups in  Oregon where he now roams. In Washington, the Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife  is backing off plans to withhold exact locations of radio-collared wolves from ranchers.  The agency had planned to revise its wolf-data system to provide general  information about wolf pack movements instead of specific location data. Ranchers  and local officials provided that data must agree to keep the information confidential...... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.) 
                  8/23/18: Wolf News Roundup 8/23/2018 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Severe winter conditions proved to be difficult  for a small population of wood bison in Alaska, and wolves took advantage,  killing about one-quarter of a wintering herd of this large ungulate. In Oregon, the adult male wolf that made history by  crossing into California in 2011 has now sired his fifth litter of pups in  Oregon where he now roams. In Washington, the Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife  is backing off plans to withhold exact locations of radio-collared wolves from ranchers.  The agency had planned to revise its wolf-data system to provide general  information about wolf pack movements instead of specific location data. Ranchers  and local officials provided that data must agree to keep the information confidential...... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.) 
                  7/26/18: Idaho  depredations reach record high 
                  (By Idaho  Rangeland Resources Commission) With 61 confirmed wolf-livestock kills already documented in  the state of Idaho from January to June 2018, federal authorities are expecting  a busy summer after wolves killed seven sheep in three separate attacks in the  Sawtooth National Recreation Area between July 9th and July 13th, officials  said. In fact, 23 years after wolves were reintroduced to Idaho beginning in  1995, federal authorities responded to a record 113 different sheep and cattle  ranches in the 2018 state fiscal year to perform necropsies on wolf-livestock  kills, where livestock kills were confirmed, and 217 ranch properties to  investigate wolf kills overall, officials said. Both of those numbers set  records..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.) 
                  7/26/18: Oregon's  depredation problem 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit,
                  Pinedale Online!) Northeastern  Oregon's livestock losses to wolves are causing budget problems, according to a  new article in High Country News. Reports of missing cattle have skyrocketed,  even though the number of confirmed cattle kills hasn't, according to HNC.  Since compensation for depredations is supposed to increase acceptance of wolf  presence, HNC questions whether there are better ways to "incentivize coexistence." ... .(Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.) 
                  7/17/18: Researcher  safe after wolf encounter 
                    (By Cat Urbigkit,
                  Pinedale Online!) In July, 2018, a seasonal U.S. Forest Service employee  completing research surveys in the Okanogan Wenatchee National Forest  encountered two adult gray wolves. The individual observed wolf tracks and  heard yipping and barking for a period of time before the wolves approached. After  unsuccessful attempts to scare the wolves away (including yelling, waving and  deploying a can of bear spray in the direction of the wolves) the individual climbed  a tree and used a radio to call for assistance. A Department of Natural  Resources fire crew extracted the researcher in a helicopter dispatched through  a multi-agency fire center in Colville. Wildlife officials believe the  researcher had come close to a denning site.... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.) 
7/17/18: Wolf  News Roundup 7/17/2018 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit,
                  Pinedale Online!) Wyoming  officials have approved a 58-wolf hunting quota for the 2018 hunt in the trophy  game area of the northwest portion of the state, up from last year’s quota of  44.  The Washington Department of Fish  & Wildlife is revising its wolf-data system in which it shares locations of  radio-collared wolves with livestock producers and county officials in order to  help livestock producers protect their herds, while also protecting the  carnivores......  (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.)  
                  7/8/18: Wolf  News Roundup 7/8/2018 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit,
                  Pinedale Online!) Wolf  advocates are urging the U.S. Forest Service to revoke a New Mexico rancher’s  cattle grazing permit after the man pleaded guilty to killing a Mexican gray  wolf, a criminal misdemeanor. A reporter in Oregon tackles the issue of living  with wolves in his state.  An Illinois  man in stirring up media attention with his claim that he’s got a pack of wolves  on his property. The wolf population in France is experiencing a high growth  rate, and plans are in place to keep boosting the population. The Alps are home  to a population of about 600 wolves, and a cross-border coalition of alpine  regions now argue that wolves no longer need special protected status..... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.)  
                  6/19/18: Montana canine is a wolf 
                  (By Montana  Fish, Wildlife & Parks) The  canine creature shot in Montana a month ago  is a gray wolf. DNA  from the animal, which was shot legally by a rancher near Denton on May 16, was  tested at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service forensic laboratory in Ashland,  Oregon. The lab compared the animal’s DNA with thousands of other DNA samples  from wolves, coyotes and dogs. The conclusion was clear – this animal is a gray  wolf from the northern Rocky Mountains. Wolves  are fairly common in Montana. According to the 2017 Montana Gray Wolf Program  Annual Report, population estimates suggest there are approximately 900 wolves  in Montana. This marks the 13th consecutive year that Montana has far exceeded  wolf recovery goals..... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.)  
                  6/12/18: Wolf  News Roundup 6/12/2018 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit,
                  Pinedale Online!) The  National Park Service has issued a decision to reintroduce wolves to Isle Royale.  Over a three to five year period, the NPS will introduce between 20-30 wolves  on the island. Hunters  in Sweden will not be able to hunt wolves this year, since the wolf population  has fallen to just over 300 animals. A Swedish court ruling requires that the  country maintain a population of at least 300 wolves before wolf hunting can be  authorized. Wisconsin’s  wolf population has decreased slightly, but still has at least 238 wolf packs,  with a minimum population of more than 900 animals, according to state wildlife  officials. This leveling off has been anticipated and may suggest that wolves are beginning to occupy less-suitable habitat as their range has expanded in the state..... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.)  
                  5/29/18: Wolf  News Roundup 5/29/2018 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit,
                  Pinedale Online!) The Great Falls Tribune has posted photos and an  article about a wolf-like animal shot and killed in northcentral Montana  recently. Photos of the animal have gone viral, along with wild speculation  about what the animal actually is. A man was sentenced to a one-year term of probation  and was ordered to pay $2,300 in restitution to the Mexican Wolf Recovery  Program for intentionally killing a Mexican Gray Wolf. .Alaska and federal officials continue to  struggle with setting the proper deer and wolf harvest levels on Prince of  Wales Island..... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.)  
                  5/21/18: Wolf  News Roundup 5/21/2018 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit,
                  Pinedale Online!) Researchers from Michigan Technological  University have released the annual Winter Study report detailing updates on  the ecology of Isle Royale National Park. For the third year in a row, the Isle  Royale wolf population remains a mere two, while the moose population continues  to stay above the historic average. Without the pressure of predation, the  expanding moose population will have a greater impact on the island's forest  ecology. ..... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.)  
                  4/22/18: WG&F proposes wolf harvest of 58 
                  (By Wyoming Game & Fish) The population of gray wolves  in Wyoming continues to be healthy and exceed all criteria established to show  that the species is recovered. As part of the management of wolves Wyoming uses  hunting as it does with many other species. The draft regulation for the 2018  wolf hunting regulation is now available for public comment. Public meetings  are being held around the state during the month of May, 2018..... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.)  
                  4/20/18: Wolf  hunt didn't decrease population much 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit,
                  Pinedale Online!) In 2017, the Wyoming Game and  Fish Department instituted a wolf hunting season with the biological objective  to reduce the wolf population by approximately 24% within the trophy wolf hunt  area, from 210 wolves to 160 wolves. According to the agency’s annual wolf  report for 2017, "Evaluation of the 2017 wolf hunting season data  demonstrated the hunting strategy in 2017 did not reduce the wolf population as  intended from ≥210 wolves to approximately 160 wolves (6% decline vs. 24%  predicted decline)."..... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.)  
                  4/19/18: Wolf  News Roundup 4/19/2018 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit,
                  Pinedale Online!) In northern Minnesota, cattle ranchers indicate that 118  cattle went missing from 40 cattle ranchers surveyed. Wolf numbers have  increased in the state of Minnesota due to an increasing deer population, as  much as 25% from the previous year. Oregon is also dealing with increasing wolf  depredations. Oregon’s wolf population increased  last year, with state officials estimating the state has a minimum population  of 124 wolves...... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.)  
                  3/19/18: WA: Addressing Wolf Conflicts 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit,
                  Pinedale Online!) A new nonprofit organization has been awarded more than $185,000 to provide non-lethal wolf deterrence for livestock producers in northeastern Washington. The Northeast Washington Wolf-Cattle Collaborative intends to provide a collection of deterrence devices (flashing lights, electric fences and chargers, air horns) for use by livestock producers, as well as training and hiring range riders at an estimated cost of $20,000 for each rider for the June-October grazing season...... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.)  
                  3/19/18: Washington wolf population increases 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit,
                  Pinedale Online!) Washington's wolf population  continued to grow in 2017 for the ninth straight year, according to the results  of an annual survey conducted by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.  The state was home to at least 122 wolves, 22 packs, and 14 successful breeding  pairs, based on field surveys conducted over the winter by state, tribal, and  federal wildlife managers. Survey findings reflect information from aerial  surveys, remote cameras, wolf tracks, and signals from radio-collared wolves. As  the state's wolf population has continued to grow, WDFW has expanded its efforts  to collaborate with livestock producers, conservation groups, and local residents  to prevent conflict between wolves and domestic animals..... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.) 
                   
                  3/19/18: Adding wolves to Isle  Royale 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit,
                  Pinedale Online!) The National Park Service has  proposed to introduce 20-30 wolves to Isle Royale National Park. Over the past  five years the wolf population has declined steeply and at this time, natural  recovery of the population is unlikely.  There  appears to be two severely inbred wolves remaining on the island, and the proposal  to augment the population has generated substantial controversy regarding human  intervention in a wilderness environment. According to the National Park  Service, wolves have not always been part of the Isle Royale ecosystem. They  have been present for more than 65 years, and have played a role in the  ecosystem affecting the moose population and other species during that time. After  a waiting period of at least 30 days, the NPS will issue a Record of Decision that  documents the final decision and sets out a course of action for the project.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.) 
                   
                  2/26/18: Wolf news roundup - 2/26/18 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit,
                  Pinedale Online!) In the Gros Ventre of  Wyoming, wolves are killing each other in response to lack of elk. In Colorado,  a former Yellowstone wolf biologist is telling the the state how they need  wolves and 300-400 would pose no problem. Minnesota’s moose rise and decline is  closely tied to wolf population numbers with the idea that decreasing the wolf  population through hunting would allow the moose population to rebound. Idaho  gets a reprieve from having to destroy wolf monitoring data. The French government  approved a plan to allow the wolf population to expand 40 percent in the next  five years to an estimated 500 animals.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.) 
                   
                  1/28/18: Wolf news roundup - 1/28/18 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit,
                  Pinedale Online!) About 2,500 hunting licenses were sold for  Wyoming’s 2017 wolf hunting season, according to the Associated Press, and with  44 wolves taken in the trophy hunting region of the state, less than two  percent of license-holders were successful in taking a wolf. The Idaho Wolf Depredation Control Board spent  more than $460,000 on controlling problem wolves in the state in 2017,  according to a report in The Spokesman-Review. Although the state allows both  regulated hunting and trapping of wolves, the state is experiencing an increase  in reports of wolf depredations on livestock. 
Oregon livestock producers were compensated  $395,000 for livestock losses due to wolves last year, while the state’s wolf  population remains at an estimated 112 animals. According to a report in the  Capital Press, producers are now spending an average of $10,000 per wolf on  tools to protect their livestock..... (Click
                  on the link above for the complete story.)  
                  1/17/18: Wolf news roundup - 1/17/18 
                  (By Cat Urbigkit,
                  Pinedale Online!) Wyoming Game & Fish  Department reports that the total agency goal of 44 wolves was met for 2017.  Although some hunt areas were under quota, and some were over. In addition,  there were 32 wolves killed in the state’s predator zone in 2017. In Oregon, members  of the Rogue wolf pack in southwestern Oregon have repeatedly killed cattle on  a ranch since the start of the year. Tracking collars place members of the pack  near the scene. For the first time in 100 years, a wolf has been detected in  Belgium. The radio-collared wolf originated in Germany, but has also roamed in  the Netherlands. The wolf has reportedly traveled 300 miles in 10 days.... (Click
                    on the link above for the complete story.) 
                   
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