From MexicoNewsDaily.com:
Four Mexican wolf pups, two males and two females, were recently born at the San Juan de Aragón Wildlife Conservation Center in Mexico City, according to the city Environment Ministry (Sedema).
The birth of the pups represent a key advance in the conservation of the Mexican wolf, a subspecies of gray wolf, which virtually disappeared from the American landscape during the 1970s.
Click here for the full story.
‘Demonised’: Polish scientists warn of fear mongering about wolves
From Phys.org:
Scientist Roman Gula showed images of wolves filmed in a nearby forest with hidden cameras to locals in the Polish town of Konskie, assuring them they pose no threat. The professor has been monitoring a wolf pack in the region—midway between Warsaw and Krakow—for years.
“Wolves have recolonized Polish forests,” he declared proudly to people gathered in a community hall. Having almost gone extinct in the 1950s because of hunting and war, the country is now home to some 3,600 wolves—one of Europe’s largest populations after the species made a remarkable comeback.
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Human-wolf interactions create growing alarm [in Italy]: ISPRA protocol
From CacciaPassione:
The increase in population of the Lupo in Europe has also affected the Italian territory. The rapid recovery of the Italian wolf population has meant an increase in the number of individuals, confirmed by the results of the national survey conducted by ISPRA in the years 2020-21, and the spread of the species in many areas from which it had become extinct, including areas with a high human presence.
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Colorado’s gray wolf reintroduction plan costs $2.2 million more than expected, agency says
From CBSNews.com:
Colorado Parks and Wildlife told an interim legislative committee it has spent about $3 million to relocate 30 wolves to the state over the last two years. That’s more than double what voters were told it would cost when they approved wolf reintroduction in 2020.
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Mexican gray wolves are moved from Cochise County [Arizona] as locals seek end to species protection
From AZCentral.com:
A group of neighbors gathered on rancher Ed Ashurt’s property in the early morning light to see with their own eyes the helicopters flying towards the Peloncillo Mountains. Since the pack of endangered Mexican gray wolves was released into the wild last spring, ranchers in Cochise County have wanted them removed.
On May 27, after months of the wolves attacking their cattle, the day had finally come.
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Full Of Grizzlies, Wolves And Cougars, Yellowstone’s Top Apex Predator Is A Bug
From CowboyStateDaily.com:
Yellowstone National Park is full of grizzlies, wolves and elusive mountain lions. But the apex predators of the park might be those tiny tiger beetles that thrive around thermal pools — and hunt and kill everything else.
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Wolf activity closes Wick Beach between Tofino and Ucluelet [Canada]
From WesterlyNews.ca:
Aggressive wolf activity shut down Wickanninish Beach on Thursday. Pacific Rim National Park Reserve officials have temporarily closed the beach and the BC Conservation Service is investigating a wolf attack on a dog in the area, according to Parks spokesperson Laura Judson.
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CPW releases this year’s Colorado Gray Wolf Annual Report
From SteamboatRadio.com:
The Colorado Gray Wolf Annual Report has been released by Colorado Parks and Wildlife. It is for the biological year of April 1, 2024, through the end of March this year. Here’s what was released from Colorado Parks and Wildlife today (Friday, June 27, 2025).
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CPW map shows gray wolf may have neared Denver, but biologist says its misleading
From KDVR.com:
DENVER (KDVR) — Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s latest wolf activity map shows a wolf may have strayed close to the Denver metro area in the last couple of months, but a wildlife biologist says the map can be misleading.
Gary Skiba says CPW uses watersheds to track wolf activity in the state, one just highlighted on CPW’s latest wolf activity map stretching into Jefferson and Denver counties. But that same watershed also extends far to the west into the mountains and the map doesn’t give an exact location.
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Two Republican senators attempt to kill bipartisan proposal to raise lodging tax for wildlife
From OregonCapitalChronicle.org:
Raising the state hotel tax by 1.25 percentage points could send millions to the Fish and Wildlife Department, but the Republican senators say it will hurt the tourism industry.
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Birth of 4 Mexican wolf pups brings hope for the endangered canines
From MexicoNewsDaily.com:
Four Mexican wolf pups, two males and two females, were recently born at the San Juan de Aragón Wildlife Conservation Center in Mexico City, according to the city Environment Ministry (Sedema).
The birth of the pups represent a key advance in the conservation of the Mexican wolf, a subspecies of gray wolf, which virtually disappeared from the American landscape during the 1970s.
Click here for the full story.