From The Guardian:
In the pre-dawn darkness of Sierra de la Culebra, Zamora, Spain, a sudden howl pierces the cold. More join in, until the baying chorus echoes all around. As the sky begins to lighten, their shapes emerge: first the alpha male, and then the rest of the wolf pack, appearing in the twilight where light and darkness merge.
In Europe, this large carnivore was hunted for centuries and almost exterminated, surviving only in inaccessible or sparsely populated areas. Now, thanks to changing attitudes and increased protection, Europe’s wolf population is slowly recovering, and the apex predators are gradually returning to their former territories.
Click here for the full story.
Wolves to return to Colorado
From the Mountain Mail:
Ten gray wolves will be making the long journey from Oregon to Colorado this year as part of the wolf reintroduction effort.
Colorado Parks and Wildlife and Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife announced in a press releaseOct. 6 a one-year agreement that detailed the sourcing of wolves from Oregon to be brought to the Western Slope.
The relocation of the wolves comes after the 2020 vote to reintroduce wolves into Colorado by the end of 2023.
Click here for the full story.
Saving the elusive and endangered Ethiopian wolf
From Geographical:
As the first rays of morning light streak across the frozen gorse and heather, and in the heavens, 100,000 stars fade from view, a sudden movement catches my eye. A large creature with a reputation as dark as the moorland night moves with unnerving speed and silence over this bleak, high-altitude landscape. Pausing for just a second, it turns its head toward me and I catch a fleeting glimpse of sharp ears, hard eyes, and a bushy tail dipped in black, and then the ghost of the highlands turns and continues its silent race against the rising daylight. My encounter with a wolf is over.
Click here for the full story.
Conservationists fearful of what Three Sisters developments mean for wildlife
From Rocky Mountain Outlook:
BANFF – Twenty-five years ago, Canmore wildlife biologist Karsten Heuer embarked on an epic 3,400-kilometre journey from Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming to Watson Lake in the Yukon, following the path of wide-ranging species like wolves and grizzly bears.
Taking a break from his job at Parks Canada, Heuer plotted the wildest route he could, hiking, skiing and paddling between 1998 and 2000 to find out how realistic Yellowstone to Yukon (Y2Y) Conservation Initiative’s grand vision of a connected continental corridor was on the ground.
Click here for the full story.
‘I got to know the wolf’: how Spain’s shepherds are learning to live with their old enemy
From The Guardian:
In the pre-dawn darkness of Sierra de la Culebra, Zamora, Spain, a sudden howl pierces the cold. More join in, until the baying chorus echoes all around. As the sky begins to lighten, their shapes emerge: first the alpha male, and then the rest of the wolf pack, appearing in the twilight where light and darkness merge.
In Europe, this large carnivore was hunted for centuries and almost exterminated, surviving only in inaccessible or sparsely populated areas. Now, thanks to changing attitudes and increased protection, Europe’s wolf population is slowly recovering, and the apex predators are gradually returning to their former territories.
Click here for the full story.
Here are your stories about seeing wolves and mountain lions in Maine
From the Piscataquis Observer:
A video from northern Maine submitted to the BDN of a probable male wolf and four of his pups stirred up some discussion.
The Maine Wolf Coalition has submitted photographic evidence of individual animals that could be wolves, but biologists consistently say there are no breeding wolf populations in the state.
Click here for the full story.
New wolf exhibit opens at High Desert Museum this weekend
From Central Oregon Daily News:
A new exhibit showcasing wolves opens Saturday at the High Desert Museum.
“Wolves: Photography by Ronan Donovan” gives visitors a close-up view of gray wolves through the lens of a National Geographic explorer and photographer, and provides an inside look at the daily lives of the wild canines.
“You know what are they like on a day-to-day basis? How do they hunt and how do they live together and family units? How do they play? So those are two major factors in the exhibit, both the history of eradication and efforts to bring them back from extinction. And then also, what is it like to be a wolf? You know what is it like to live in Yellowstone in a wolf pack,” said Hayley Brazier, Donald M. Kerr Curator at the museum.
Click here for the full story.
Wisconsin Senate passes Republican bill to force setting a wolf hunt goal
From AP:
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — The Wisconsin Senate passed a Republican-backed bill Tuesday that would force state wildlife managers to set a firm numeric goal for the state’s wolf population.
The proposal, which next heads to the Assembly, comes after the Department of Natural Resources did not set a hard cap on the state’s wolf population in its new management plan, but said the population should be around 1,000.
The state has operated since 1999 under a wolf management plan that limits the statewide population at 350 animals. The new plan calls for the DNR to work with advisory committees to monitor local populations and decide whether to reduce them, maintain them or allow them to grow.
Sen. Felzkowski: Casts votes on special session, government waste and wolves
From WisPolitics:
Madison, WI – On Tuesday, the Wisconsin State Senate convened for Regular Session and the Governor’s Special Session on Workforce Development.
During the Governor’s Special Session, Republicans in the Legislature – the lawmaking body of government – took up an amended version of the Governor’s proposal. This bill, as passed, includes investments in childcare, occupational licensing reforms, welfare reform, worker training grants, and a $2 billion low- and middle-class income tax cut for individuals making more than $27,630.
Click her for the full story.
As U.S. Wolf Populations Slowly Rebound, A Conservation Expert Reflects on Her Decades of Research
From National Academies:
onservation efforts over the past several decades in the U.S. have enabled many species of wolf to begin to recover from near total extinction — including the gray wolf of the Northern Rockies and western Great Lakes region, the red wolf in the southeastern part of the country, and the Mexican gray wolf of the American Southwest.
To mark National Wolf Awareness Week — which takes place Oct. 15-21 — we sat down with Diane K. Boyd, a renowned wolf and carnivore specialist at Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks and an affiliate faculty member at the University of Montana, Missoula. Boyd served on a National Academies study committee that produced a 2019 report on the taxonomy of the red wolf and Mexican gray wolf.
Click here for the full story.
New Research: How wild wolves may be key in improving domestic dogs’ health
From Curry Costal Pilot:
Gut microbes found in wild wolves may be the key to alleviating a debilitating gastrointestinal condition common to domestic dogs, according to a study led by researchers at Oregon State University – Cascades.
The authors report a novel strain of Paenibacillus bacteria with characteristics of a probiotic – an organism that conveys a health benefit to the host.
Click here for the full story.