From UCANR.edu:
Butte County community gathers for Dinner, Documentary and Discussion.
From UCANR.edu:
Butte County community gathers for Dinner, Documentary and Discussion.
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.
From PetaPixel.com:
Remote cameras and tracking data are documenting a wolf’s historic journey into Los Angeles County, the first confirmed sighting of the species there in nearly a century.
From WGAL.com:
HERSHEY, Pa. —Police charged the parents of a 17-month-old boy, saying they left their child unsupervised at ZooAmerica and a wolf grabbed the child’s hand. The charges against the Lancaster County man and woman came down Monday.
From KRCR.com:
SISKIYOU, California — Gray wolves were spotted closer to homes in Siskiyou County, as the Siskiyou County Sheriff’s Office said the encounters are becoming more frequent and more concerning.
From TheGuardian.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.
From SFGate.com:
Deep in the heart of Yellowstone National Park, audio recorders roughly the size of hardcover books are documenting wolf barks, elk bugles and bird chirps 24 hours of the day, seven days a week, 365 days a year.
But it’s the new insights into wolf behavior that have proven most useful.
From SierraClub.org:
Bae, like many ingenues before her, captured the hearts and minds of people across the globe when she showed up in Southern California just before Valentine’s Day. Over a five-day period, the three-year-old wolf toured the Golden State, crossing alpine meadows, roads, and oak woodlands.
State officials call her by her government name, BEY03F, but admirers offer something with a little more heart, gesturing toward why she embarked on her 500-mile trek.
From SmithsonianMag.com:
Two new ancient DNA studies suggest that domesticated dogs were widespread in western Eurasia more than 14,000 years ago.
From WildBeimWild.com:
Long-term herd protection monitoring shows that when wolf attacks occur despite herd protection measures, the wolf has usually found a weak point at some location. Only in the rarest cases has it learned to deliberately circumvent well-implemented protective measures.

The International Wolf Center uses science-based education to teach and inspire the world about wolves, their ecology, and the wolf-human relationship.
