From Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife:

Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) staff is considering incremental lethal removal of one or two wolves from the Tucannon wolf pack territory in southeast Washington following recurrent depredations in that area.

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From The Colorado Sun:

The rural, wildlife and outdoor recreational issues facing the next governor of Colorado are significant, with at least one species at a critical juncture with an uncertain future. On Tuesday, voters across the state will select a Democrat and a Republican from among five candidates to replace term-limited Gov. Jared Polis, a Democrat.

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From Cibola Citizen:

CIBOLA COUNTY, N.M. – The Mexican gray wolf is a major wildlife issue for western New Mexico as herds steadily grow.

For years, most of the debate over the endangered wolf has centered in Catron County, the Gila National Forest and eastern Arizona. But recent wolf movement near Mount Taylor and livestock deaths reported near the Catron-Cibola County line have brought the issue closer to Cibola County residents, ranchers and public land users.

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From Balkan Insight:

After a wolf was found in a parking lot in Skopje, a persistent problem has been highlighted again: North Macedonia has no suitable place for rehabilitating wild animals kept illegally as pets or rescued from injury.

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From Steamboat Radio:

Colorado Parks and Wildlife has announced two groups to receive funding to help raise awareness and promote the Born to Be Wild License Plate program. The Rocky Mountain Wolf Project was awarded $30,000 to support their Coexistence Through Collaboration Campaign. The Native American Broadcasting Company, division Red Hawk, was awarded $20,000 to help raise awareness of the license plates.

Colorado Parks and Wildlife says money from purchase of the Born to Be Wild license plates is to help raise awareness of wolf activity in Colorado, and help minimize wolf-livestock conflicts.

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From NLTimes:

At least 41 wolves that disappeared from monitoring systems in the Netherlands between October 2021 and March 2026 probably fell victim to poaching. This comes from a report released Tuesday by wildlife crime researcher Pauline Verheij, who says the figure is almost certainly an underestimate, de Volkskrant reports.

The Veluwe and the provinces of Drenthe and Friesland were identified as poaching hotspots.

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From Mongabay.com:

Kiraksal, a hilly village in the drought-prone region in Maharashtra, has documented 606 species, including the Indian wolf and striped hyena.

The project used camera trap experiments to document wildlife and conducted GIS mapping of five-year data to ascertain land use patterns.

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From EarthTouchNews.com:

Outside humans, the overall numero-uno predator of beavers is the grey wolf. Research over the past decade or two in particular has gone a long way toward illuminating this particular hunter/hunted dynamic.

That said, it remains a somewhat obscure subject—not least because of how hard it is to directly observe interactions between the two critters: the one the biggest wild canid in the world, the other the second-biggest rodent in the world—and a semiaquatic, mostly nocturnal engineer renowned for its ability to sculpt landscapes.

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From IndiaTimes.com:

A year after wolf attacks turned parts of Bahraich into fear zones, killing 14 people and critically injuring 30, most of them children, the district has reported no human-wolf conflict so far this season, with forest officials crediting a conservation-;ed response that protetced dens in the Ghaghara river catchment and stoped activities they said had pushed wolves towards villages.

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From WHOP.com:

The Woodlands Nature Station in the Land Between the Lakes is welcoming a new face, as red wolf Rosie will join the ranks of the animals that call the wildlife station home.

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