From DutchNews.no:

Five animals have so far been fitted with tracking collars in a study examining how wolves, prey animals and people move through the Dutch landscape, researchers at the Hoge Veluwe national park said on Thursday.

The researchers, led by Wageningen University, have so far tagged one wolf and four deer. More than 400 visitors have also voluntarily carried GPS trackers while walking in the park, covering almost 13,000 kilometres in total.

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From CapitalPress.com:

The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife’s partnership with high-profile range-rider Daniel Curry has ended before it began. Fish and Wildlife has asked lawmakers to delete from its budget $200,000 earmarked last spring for Curry’s organization, Project GRIPH,  to tackle wolf-livestock conflicts in southeast Washington.

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From ElkhornMediaGroup.com:

The Wallowa County Board of Commissioners voted unanimously Wednesday, January 7, to adopt a new county wolf management policy, signaling a strong request for more aggressive state action to address growing conflicts between wolves, livestock producers, and wildlife populations.

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From AspenTimes.com:

At the surface, Colorado’s wolf program can appear rife with conflict. However, many Coloradans are working to bridge gaps between the Front Range and Western Slope, ranchers and wolf advocates, and to reduce conflict between livestock and wolves.

Take Chip Isenhart, and his burgeoning organization Wild Ranch.

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From ColoradoSun.com:

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service backed Colorado’s plan to obtain wolves from Canada nearly two years before the federal agency lambasted the move as a violation of its rules, newly obtained documents show.

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From MissoulaCurrent.com:

(Missoula Current) In a follow-up to their study showing a large majority of Montanans tolerate wolves, University of Montana researchers have shown that people can feel more negative toward wolves when reminded of their political affiliations, often because they overestimate the extent of their group’s negative feelings.

From ElkhornMediaGroup.com:

During a regular commission meeting on Wednesday, January 7, the Union County Board of Commissioners officially approved the allocation of $53,196.31 in non-lethal wolf deterrent grant funding. The funds were initially provided to Union County by the Oregon Department of agriculture, with applications being reviewed by the Union County Wolf Depredation Compensation Advisory Committee on December 16, 2025.

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From A-Z-Animals:

Gray wolves are currently listed as endangered under the Endangered Species Act in most of the lower 48 states, except for the Northern Rocky Mountain population. In December 2025, the U.S. House passed a bill to remove these protections, but as of January 2026, gray wolves remain federally protected until any new law is enacted.

Fewer than 20,000 gray wolves currently live in the U.S. Given these numbers, it’s hard to believe wolf populations are actually saving lives when their own still hang in the balance.

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From 9News.com:

Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s former director has agreed to become Wyoming’s Game and Fish Deputy Director, according to an employment offer letter obtained by 9NEWS Investigates.

Jeff Davis signed the letter on Dec. 22.

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From ColoradoPublicRadio:

It’s been more than three years since the former Biden administration gave Colorado permission to proceed with its controversial wolf reintroduction program.

Now the Trump administration is threatening to revoke that authority and take over the restoration effort.

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