From TheFencePost.com:

The federal 10(j) rule, which Colorado has in place, allows ranchers and livestock owners to shoot and kill wolves caught in the act of attacking livestock, working dogs, or to protect human life and that law is about to be put to the test. The results, which will come from a Colorado Parks and Wildlife Commission that includes three newly appointed commissioners, have the attention of ranchers across the West who deal with depredations.

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From CollingwoodToday.ca:

Grey County is going to increase the bounties it pays to hunters and trappers who eliminate “nuisance” beavers, coyotes and wolves, even after a staff report recommended ending the program.

At its meeting on June 11, council voted to continue to have a bounty system in place and to increase the bounties paid by the county. For more than a year, the county has been studying the beaver and coyote/wolf bounties it offers to hunters and trappers.

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From HeraldAndNews.com:

During the regular Klamath County Board of Commissioners’ administrative meeting Tuesday, Commissioner Derrick DeGroot brought two resolutions from the National Association of Counties, which he will formally sponsor.

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From Denver7.com:

Colorado Parks and Wildlife has killed a lone, uncollared wolf believed to be responsible for 10 confirmed depredation events since the summer of 2025, the agency announced Saturday.

Officials said video evidence showed the wolf — originally a member of the Copper Creek Pack — was the same elusive wolf responsible for depredations in Rio Blanco County in 2025 and early 2026. Officials had made several previous attempts to “lethally remove” the wolf, but were unsuccessful and eventually called off the effort.

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From NationalParksTraveler.org:

A bill that would cut all resources to and end the transportation of Mexican gray wolf puppies into Arizona passed the state’s legislature on June 9. Conservation groups say the move would hinder cross-fostering and debilitate efforts to recover the federally endangered species.

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From WyoFile.com:

A recent report on Wyoming’s wolves is drawing attention to a longstanding belief among some Americans that wolves in the Cowboy State are significantly bigger than gray wolves in other parts of the Lower 48.

WyoFile, which recently explored this topic with key wolf biologists, noted a conspiracy theory that Canadian “superwolves” translocated from Alberta and B.C. to Yellowstone and Idaho years ago were a “bigger, invasive species” than the wolves extirpated from the Lower 48 during colonization. That’s simply not true, experts say — superwolves aren’t a thing.

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From CapitalPress.com:

Documented wolf mortalities in Idaho increased recently but remain below an earlier average.

Mortalities from July 1, 2025, through June 9 totaled 315, Cory Mosby, Idaho Fish and Game natural resource program coordinator for large carnivores, told the Idaho Wolf Depredation Control Board during its June 9 meeting. The state’s fiscal year starts July 1.

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From KnoxNews.com:

SOUTH SALEM, NY, UNITED STATES, June 1, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — The Wolf Conservation Center (the Center) is thrilled to share that a critically endangered male Red Wolf pup was born onsite in South Salem, NY on April 29. This marks the second litter for parents Martha and Oka; their first litter of three brothers, Scuppernong, Ember and Proton, was born in 2025.

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From CodyEnterprise.com:

Rick McIntyre’s special anniversary date was May 19, 2025. It marked the 10,000th day he ventured into Yellowstone National Park to search for wolf packs, spot wolves and study wolf behavior.

The long-time National Park Service naturalist earned his stature as one of the world’s leading experts on gray wolves. And just because he is officially retired from working on wolves doesn’t mean he is retired from learning about wolves or talking about them.

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From OutdoorHub.com:

If you hunt, fish, or spend time in the eastern Upper Peninsula, this meeting is worth your attention. The Michigan Department of Natural Resources will brief its Eastern Upper Peninsula Citizens’ Advisory Council on June 18 in St. Ignace.

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