From SummitDaily.com:

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has opened up a public comment period for a narrow part of Colorado’s experimental wolf population permit.

The federal agency is not proposing any changes to the permit but is offering the public an opportunity to weigh in on how it collects information relating to Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s 10(j) rule. The public comment period is open until May 11.

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From WildBeimWild.com:

Dr. Dominik Thiel heads the Office for Nature, Hunting and Fishing in the canton of St. Gallen. He kills squirrels for sport, travels to a country at war to hunt wolves, and presents it all as professional development. Two years after the scandal, he is still in office. This is not an isolated case. This is a system.

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From SkyHiNews.com:

An environmental nonprofit wants Colorado Parks and Wildlife to have stricter rules guiding when wolves responsible for repeated livestock attacks can be killed.

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From ActionNewsNow.com:

PAYNES CREEK, Calif. – Northern California ranchers are voicing concerns over wolves threatening their livestock. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife confirmed one wolf pack in eastern Tehama County and is working with ranchers to prevent potential attacks

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From TheFencePost.com:

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Department of the Interior are requesting comments with regard to the management of the Colorado gray wolf program, grizzly bears and Mexican wolves. The 60-day comment period is open until May 11, 2026, and can be accessed on the Federal Register. The three rules are proposed for renewal without change.

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From KTVZ.com:

BLUE RIVER, Ore. (KTVZ) — A Central Oregon man’s dream encounter came true Friday: capturing the McKenzie River Ranger District’s first confirmed wolf on video. Jake Rau spotted the animal feeding on roadkill deer along Highway 126 in Willamette National Forest.

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From SixthTone.com:

From hand-fed wolves to biscuit-dependent birds, China’s wildlife is paying the price of viral tourism, as experts call for prioritizing distance, respect, and the long-term health of ecosystems.

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From DiscoverWildlife.com:

There’s a lovely film on Youtube called How Wolves Change Rivers. Narrated by the British writer and environmental campaigner George Monbiot, and largely drawn from his book Feral, it describes how the reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone National Park in the US state of Wyoming in 1995 has precipitated a series of ecological benefits.

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From GearJunkie.com:

Another reintroduced gray wolf has died in northwest Colorado, bringing the known death toll to 14 of the 25 wolves moved into the state since 2023.

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From MexicoNewsDaily.com:

A pack of endangered wolves was released into the wild in the northern Mexican state of Durango on Friday, thanks to collaboration between Mexico and the United States under the Saving Animals from Extinction (SAFE) program.