From AspenTimes.com:

At its March meeting, the Colorado Parks and Wildlife Commission approved over $700,000 in compensation to six ranchers who saw losses related to gray wolves as the agency makes its way through claims that could reach over $1 million from wolf-livestock conflict last year.

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From CowboyStateDaily.com:

A wolf that a southeast Wyoming rancher shot in January might have been running around western Nebraska for months before roaming into the Cowboy State. Wolf sightings are rare in Nebraska but they’ve become more frequent as wolf populations grow in other states.

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From JacksonHoleNews&Guide.com:

Cody Roberts, the Sublette County man who prosecutors accused of torturing a wolf in the Green River Bar, pleaded guilty Thursday to felony animal cruelty.

He also apologized for his actions. “I regret my actions and apologize to my community and family,” Roberts said at his Thursday morning change of plea hearing. “I hope that after this hearing everyone can heal and move forwards.”

From LiveScience.com:

Striking first-of-its-kind footage has captured the moment a red fox preyed on a 1-month-old gray wolf pup at a nature reserve in Italy.

Scientists monitoring gray wolves (Canis lupus) in the Castelporziano Presidential Estate, a nature reserve about 15.5 miles (25 kilometers) from Rome, had noticed a female with a swollen abdomen. GPS monitors showed her repeatedly visiting a secondary den, suggesting she had already given birth.

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From Finance.Yahoo.com:

The Tech Interactive, San Jose’s science center, is the only theater in the Bay Area presenting Lost Wolves of Yellowstone, an IMAX original documentary chronicling the historic return of the gray wolf to Yellowstone National Park.

Officially opening March 7, The Tech’s celebration, Wolves Weekend, features a live appearance by Emmy Award-winning director Thomas Winston, wolf-themed activities, and The Big Howl from the balcony overlooking Plaza de César Chávez. No actual wolves will be in attendance.

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From The Guardian.com:

Wolf hunting will be allowed in Germany under legislation passed by the lower house of parliament in response to a rapidly growing population and a sharp rise in attacks on livestock.

The return and growth of the wolf population in the last three decades has emerged as a wedge issue in Germany, the land of the Brothers Grimm who popularised the spectre of the Big Bad Wolf.

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From KQED.org:

After a century-long absence, gray wolves are returning to California. Biologists estimate some 70 wolves are living in the state, and recently, a female wolf traveled into Los Angeles County, the first such sighting. But their comeback is not without controversy. Ranchers in rural counties say they’re losing livestock to predation, while conservationists say the wolves bring ecological benefits as they reclaim part of their historic range.

From CPRNews.com:

Last month, a couple of lone gray wolves may have traveled farther east than the animals ever have in Colorado since reintroduction in 2023.

The latest map of collared wolf activity released by Colorado Parks and Wildlife shows which areas wolves passed through from late January through late February.

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From FarmProgress.com:

It’s been nearly a year since five counties in northeastern California – Sierra, Plumas, Shasta, Lassen and Modoc – declared public safety emergencies because of wolves, which have devastated cattle ranches throughout the region and come perilously close to people.

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From SFGate.com:

The Trump administration is increasingly granting ranchers permission to kill endangered Mexican gray wolves, and giving them broader discretion to go after animals on public land. The latest permit — issued on Feb. 19 to seven ranchers, including a county commissioner, in Catron County, New Mexico — provides little evidence to justify the killing, yet targets a pack that includes a remarkable and possibly pregnant female.

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