From ColoradoPolitics.com
Colorado ranchers and producers are looking to recover losses they say have been caused by the wolf reintroduction program, submitting nearly $600,000 in claims.
Meeting the year-end deadline, three producers submitted six claims, totaling $582,000. That would more than bankrupt the state’s wolf depredation compensation fund, which received $350,000 in the 2024-25 budget. Over three years, the wolf reintroduction program has cost the state more than $5.1 million.
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The year of the wolves
From WyoFile.com:
Thirty years ago this month, gray wolves were reintroduced to Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho. Today, the people who made it happen remember the mayhem and magic of one of the 20th century’s most controversial acts of ecosystem management.
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More Than $65,000 Offered for Information About Illegal Killing of Gray Wolf in Colorado
From Center for Biological Diversity:
GRAND COUNTY, Colo.— The Center for Biological Diversity, conservation partners and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are offering rewards totaling more than $65,000 for information leading to arrests and convictions in the 2024 shooting death of a wolf in Colorado. The reward follows the Service’s announcement today that a necropsy confirmed a gunshot wound killed the father of the Copper Creek pack, who died after he was captured in early September.
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Grand County wolf was shot, say federal authorities who are looking for its killer
From ColoradoSun.com:
A wolf that died after it was captured by wildlife officials as part of a pack had been shot, and now federal authorities are looking for the culprit.
The wolf was one of the original 10 wolves reintroduced to Colorado and the adult male of the Copper Creek pack, which was captured Aug. 30 after repeatedly feeding on livestock in Grand County.
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Colorado ranchers seek $581,000 to cover losses caused by wolves, a tab the state can’t afford
From ColoradoPolitics.com
Colorado ranchers and producers are looking to recover losses they say have been caused by the wolf reintroduction program, submitting nearly $600,000 in claims.
Meeting the year-end deadline, three producers submitted six claims, totaling $582,000. That would more than bankrupt the state’s wolf depredation compensation fund, which received $350,000 in the 2024-25 budget. Over three years, the wolf reintroduction program has cost the state more than $5.1 million.
Click here for the full story.
Sweden begins wolf hunt as it aims to halve endangered animal’s population
From The Guardian:
Sweden’s wolf hunt starts on Thursday, with the country aiming to halve the population of the endangered predator.
The Swedish government has given the green light for five entire wolf families, a total of 30 wolves, to be killed in a hunt campaigners say is illegal under EU law. Under the Berne convention, protected species cannot be caused to have their populations fall under a sustainable level.
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Gray wolves now call Tulare County home as species pushes south in California
From VisaliaTimesDelta.com:
Gray wolves are alive and well in Tulare County.
The population of gray wolves has increased in the county, state, and country in recent years because of the legal protections of the Endangered Species Act, which reversed a decline that began centuries ago.
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Alaska Trappers Catch One of the Biggest Wolves Ever Recorded
From OutdoorLife.com:
On Dec. 22 I received a message from a local Fairbanks trapper whom I’ve known for years. It included a photo of an enormous black wolf he and his trapping partner had just caught, as well as the scale it was hanging from. It displayed 152 pounds. “We’re taking it to get it weighed on a certified scale right now,” he wrote. I knew, as well as he did, that this could be one of the largest wolves ever recorded.
Up close with Isegrim at the Wolf Science Center
From SchauVorbei:
At the Wolf Science Center in Ernstbrunn, dogs and wolves are kept and reared under comparable conditions in order to explore the similarities and differences between them. The animals live in spacious enclosures and receive a demanding training and activity program. This makes the wolf research center unique in the world in terms of its scientific orientation.
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Drones could ‘haze’ wolves to keep livestock safe, study shows
From OPB.com:
As wolf populations grow in Southern Oregon, ranchers are looking for non-lethal ways to keep the protected animals away from their livestock.
Wolves roaming Oregon in search of a meal may soon hear something alarming in the night air: a scene of marital strife from the 2019 film Marriage Story. Or, possibly, the predators might hear sweet riffs from Australian rock band AC/DC.
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Colorado Parks and Wildlife releases definition of ‘chronically depredating’ wolves, meeting one common request from ranchers
From VailDaily.com:
Earlier this week, Colorado Parks and Wildlife released a much-anticipated definition of “chronic depredation,” also identifying situations where lethal action could be taken for wolves that develop a pattern of killing livestock.
The definition was crafted with the help of an ad hoc working group composed of wolf advocates, Parks and Wildlife staff and the ranching community. The group was created around when the Copper Creek Pack was tied to numerous livestock deaths in Grand County and tasked with working on this definition as well as other ways to decrease tension and address conflict.
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