From NorthernNewsNow.com:
A team of researchers visited a wolf den near Cloquet on Wednesday to collar and measure a litter of pups as part of an ongoing research on wolf populations. Teams from the Fond du Lac Band and the 1854 Treaty Authority worked in partnership with the help of local high school students.
“It’s so close to home that it just feels really more important because this is the community that I live in and this is the wildlife around me,” said Cloquet High School student Melanie Buhls.
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California Is Giving Sheriffs New Tools to Deal With Gray Wolves
From ActiveNorcal.com:
CDFW Director Meghan Hertel recently toured the region, meeting with sheriffs, ranchers and community groups in areas where wolf activity has surged. The result is a set of new commitments from the agency, including working with sheriffs to authorize less-than-lethal hazing tools like pepper balls to push wolves away from livestock and back toward wild prey.
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Annual survey reveals dramatic moose, wolf population changes at Isle Royale National Park
From UpperMichigansSource.com:
ISLE ROYALE, Mich. (WLUC) – We now have the latest information about the wolf and moose populations of Isle Royale National Park.
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Wolves from PNW are killing California livestock
From FarmProgress.com:
State wildlife officials have confirmed that the year’s first wolf depredation of a cow in California occurred in eastern Plumas County on May 25, continuing what has become a string of attacks on livestock since gray wolves began migrating south from the Pacific Northwest a decade ago.
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California Now Has 12 Known Wolf Packs. Here’s Where They Are.
From ActiveNorcal.com:
According to CDFW’s March 2026 update, the state now has 12 known wolf packs spread primarily across the northern third of California. That is up from just a single pack less than a decade ago. An estimated 90 wolves now call the state home, all descendants of animals that began crossing the Oregon border in 2011.
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U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service opens comment period for Colorado wolf reintroduction
From PagosaSun.com:
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is conducting a review of Colorado’s wolf reintroduction program and has opened a public comment period to gather feedback on how the state has been addressing increasing conflicts between the newly established wolf population and livestock.
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Wolf Numbers Reach Record High in Washington, But Recovery Remains Incomplete
From LivingSnoqualmie.com:
Washington’s gray wolf population hit its highest recorded level at the end of 2025, rebounding from a dip the previous year and raising cautious optimism among wildlife managers, though one key recovery region continues to lag behind.
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Media Statement: Mexican Gray Wolf Transport Through Texas
From Texas.gov:
AUSTIN – The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) is aware of recent public interest regarding the transport of Mexican gray wolves through the state. We want to clarify that no Mexican gray wolves have been released in Texas, nor are there any plans to release wolves in the state.
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Idaho Bans Cellular Trail Cameras on Public Land, Hunting Deer and Elk with Thermals, and More
From OutdoorLife.com:
Idaho is the latest state to ban trail cameras for certain hunting applications, thanks to a new law that goes into effect this summer. Gov. Brad Little signed House Bill 939 on April 2, marking the first regulation changes in a years-long effort to address the rise of hunting technology and its role in ethical hunting.
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Researchers collar wolf pups on Fond du Lac Reservation to study survival rates
From NorthernNewsNow.com:
A team of researchers visited a wolf den near Cloquet on Wednesday to collar and measure a litter of pups as part of an ongoing research on wolf populations. Teams from the Fond du Lac Band and the 1854 Treaty Authority worked in partnership with the help of local high school students.
“It’s so close to home that it just feels really more important because this is the community that I live in and this is the wildlife around me,” said Cloquet High School student Melanie Buhls.
Click here for the full story.
Canis Lupis comeback: Wolf numbers growing in Oregon
From KLCC.org:
For millennia, wolves played a critical role in the Oregon environment, but then due to mankind, they were gone. Yet somehow, nature found a way, and slowly, wolves moved back into the state from neighboring Idaho. It’s been a difficult, often contentious rebound where the outcome has often been in doubt.
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