From OutdoorLife.com:

This story, “Wolves Don’t Live by Rules,” appeared in the March 1968 issue of Outdoor Life. Frank Glaser was a legendary predator control agent and the subject of Alaska’s Wolf Man, also by Jim Rearden.

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From Earth.com:

Wolves expanding into human-dominated landscapes are becoming less fearful of unfamiliar objects while remaining strongly responsive to direct human cues.

That contrast reveals a more selective form of caution that helps explain how wolves persist near people without losing their core avoidance of human presence.

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From Coloradoan.com:

The head of Colorado’s controversial wolf recovery program is retiring, a departure that comes during uncertain times for the voter-approved reintroduction of the predator.

Eric Odell, Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s wolf conservation program manager, will retire at the end of June, Tim Mauck, agency deputy director, said during a March 26 Legislative Sportsmen’s Caucus.

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From NaturalResourcesCommittee.gov:

Today, Ranking Member Jared Huffman (D-Calif.) released the following statement after a federal court struck down a series of Trump administration rollbacks that weakened the Endangered Species Act, restoring the law to its pre-Trump status:

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From Ecological Society of America:

Up to 87% of flowering plant species depend on a wide range of animal species for their pollination. Among mammals, nectivorous pollinator species are principally represented by flying species such as bats and, to a smaller extent, by some marsupials, rodents, primates, and small carnivores. It has been pointed out that therophily, pollination by non-flying mammals, may however be more widespread and hold more significance than currently recognized.

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From MontanaFreePress.org:

On heels of 2021 legislative mandate, Montana hunters and trappers in 2025-26 harvested lowest numbers in a decade.

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From BBCNews.com:

A woman has been bitten by a wolf in a major shopping street in Hamburg, according to German authorities.

The highly unusual attack took place in the bustling Grosse Bergstrasse in Hamburg Altona, near an inner-city Ikea store on Monday evening.

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From Bluewin.ch:

Hardly any other animal polarizes Switzerland as much as the wolf. In his new book, Basel biologist and former “Netz Natur” producer Andreas Moser says that the “evil wolf” is a myth – and the debate about it is too emotional.

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From HindustanTimes.com:

A second suspected Indian grey wolf was spotted in north Delhi’s Palla, confirming the area’s wildlife presence, with experts suggesting potential hybridization.

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From ScientificAmerican.com:

After just a couple months off the endangered species list, the gray wolf in the western Great Lakes is back to “threatened” status. A government reversal, not a sudden drop in the 4,000-plus wolf population, put the animals back on the protected list, the Associated Press reports.

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