From KoreaJoongAngDaily:

Koreans are searching for a lone wolf — but Neukgu was never meant to be alone. Neukgu, a wolf that escaped from Daejeon’s O-World zoo on Wednesday, is a descendant of wolves brought from Russia as part of a long-running effort to restore the Korean wolf — a species now virtually extinct in the country.

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From CapitolPress.com:

The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife is considering killing a wolf or two in the Crouse pack in Asotin County in southeast Washington to curb attacks on cattle, the department said April 8.

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From ColoradoSun.com:

The US Fish and Wildlife Service wants to hear how “ranchers, landowners, agencies, and other stakeholders” are experiencing Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s implementation of the rule that let them bring wolves to Colorado.

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From NationalParksTraveler.org:

Two families of Mexican gray wolves have been translocated in Durango, Mexico, almost fifty years after the last wolves were removed from the state to initiate the captive breeding program that saved the subspecies from extinction.

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From CowboyStateDaily.com:

Cody Roberts, known for torturing a wolf in February 2024 in Daniel, Wyoming, was sentenced Wednesday to 18 months’ probation and fined $1,000, with prison and more fines possible if he fails probation. The judge called the crime disturbing.

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From Jang.com.pk:

Animal safety and rescue operations are underway after hundreds gathered to search for an escaped wolf in South Korea.

Local school closed in Daejeon city as hundreds of emergency service and military personnel scoured the area around O-World theme park, where the wolf escaped from, to initiate search operations.

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From AZCapitolTimes.com:

A Benson Republican lawmaker says Arizona lawmakers need to be aware of the lessons of a fairy tale when they consider whether to preserve the Mexican gray wolf.

“Little Red Riding Hood understood that this is a predator that we’re dealing with,” said Rep. Lupe Diaz. And that, he told colleagues, is why Arizona needs a law to ensure the state doesn’t cooperate with certain federal efforts to restore its population.

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From ColoradoPolitics.com:

Federal wildlife officials have opened a formal review of Colorado’s wolf reintroduction program, launching a public comment period to assess how the state has handled rising conflicts between wolves and livestock.

A notice from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service was published in the Federal Register on Monday, setting a June 5 deadline for the comments.

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From BakerCityHerald.com:

BAKER CITY — One of three wolves remaining from the Black Pines Pack was trapped and killed by federal workers in the Keating Valley, about 15 miles east of Baker City, on Tuesday morning, April 7.

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