From Newsbreak.com:

Once teetering on the edge of extinction, the majestic wolves of Michigan are staging a heartening comeback. These resilient creatures, vital to the ecosystem, are reclaiming their rightful place in the wilderness. This article delves into the challenges they have faced, their fascinating characteristics, and the path towards a sustainable future alongside us humans.

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From TheGermanEye.com:

Recent reports have raised concerns over the alarming decline of the wolf population in Dalarna, Sweden, where the numbers have reportedly halved in recent years. Wildlife experts and conservationists are increasingly pointing to suspected poaching activities as a possible explanation for this troubling trend.

In Dalarna, the wolf population has faced significant threats, and the mysterious vanishings have sparked an urgent need for investigation. Authorities are probing the circumstances surrounding these disappearances, as the region’s ecological balance heavily relies on the presence of these apex predators.

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From NepaliTimes.com:

In the icy wilderness areas of High Asia, snow leopards glide like shadows across the snows as the haunting howls of Himalayan wolves echo across the crags.

In Nepal, high mountain dwellers have forged a delicate balance with these two elusive Himalayan predators, a timeless coexistence of human livelihoods with the wild. Snow leopards inhabit steep slopes at elevations from 3,000 to 5,500m. Wolves patrol more open stretches across grasslands and mountain meadows.

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From CABQ.gov:

In the second half of 2025, the ABQ BioPark plans to open a new behind-the-scenes care facility to support one of our region’s most iconic and endangered animals: the Mexican gray wolf. The Mexican Wolf Conservation Facility will be a 4.5 acre area located on ABQ BioPark Botanic Garden property along the bosque.

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From DChieftain.com:

After at least seven livestock animals were killed by a wolf or wolves in central New Mexico over the last year, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service killed an endangered Mexican gray wolf last week.

The agency is allowed to intentionally kill the endangered wolves within the experimental population area, which straddles Arizona and New Mexico. Wildlife advocates are critical of the decision, calling it infuriating and counterproductive, while one Catron County rancher thinks it was the right decision made too late.

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From TheSunTimesNews.com:

Michigan’s gray wolves are back in the political spotlight. A new bill in Congress—H.R. 845, the Pet and Livestock Protection Act of 2025—would remove federal protections for gray wolves across the lower 48 states. It wouldn’t stop there: the bill also aims to block any court from reviewing that decision, essentially locking it in for good.

If it passes, the fate of gray wolves in Michigan would shift squarely into the hands of the state.

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From The MunichEye.com:

The ongoing debate surrounding wolf conservation and hunting in Brandenburg has reached a critical juncture, as farmers, hunters, and landowners advocate for the culling of wolves. In contrast, conservation organizations are voicing strong opposition to these demands, claiming that the regional agricultural minister, Hanka Mittelstädt, is advancing policies without proper public discourse.

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From HCN.org:

Every summer, rancher Richard Egan grazes about 400 cattle on private and Forest Service land in northeastern California. Since 2017, the rolling grasslands and pine forest have also been home to the Lassen Pack, which has produced nine litters of pups. In 2023, the state paid Egan $5,550 to compensate him for the loss of a cow and calf to the wolves, but he says there are other, less tangible costs of operating in their territory: The stress of living with predators, for example, can cause cows to put on less weight or give birth to fewer calves.

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From ScienceDirect.com:

Marine subsidies are a conduit for both nutrients and mercury to terrestrial predators. Wolves in coastal Southeast Alaska switched from terrestrial to marine prey as sea otters became an abundant food source. δ13C and δ15N values in wolves increased with greater marine prey consumption.

From Phys.org:

Colorado’s collared gray wolves continued to travel widely last month—even roaming in watersheds that reach into the western portions of metro Denver, according to a new map released this week by state wildlife officials.

Reintroduced wolves were tracked in watersheds from the Utah border in Mesa County, in the west, to the edge of Hinsdale County in the south and to the Wyoming border in Jackson County in the north.

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