State and federal wildlife agencies counted 319 endangered Mexican gray wolves across Arizona and New Mexico this past year. Up from 286 the previous year, it marks a decade of steady recovery.
The most recent count of Mexican gray wolves found more than 300 in the wild, marking 10 consecutive years of growth. Over the past decade, the number of the endangered wolves observed in the wild ...
A newly revealed U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service document allows Catron County ranchers to kill any one endangered Mexican gray wolf who happens to be in the area of two grazing allotments near Quemado ...
Champions of the Mexican gray wolf are watching a bill introduced in Congress by Rep. Paul Gosar, R-AZ, to remove the wolf ...
The number of Mexican gray wolves in Arizona and New Mexico grew to at least 319 in 2025, as the species inches closer to possible downlisting from endangered to threatened.
Arizona ranchers are struggling with mounting livestock losses, also known as depredation, due to the recovery of the Mexican Gray Wolf, a conflict that has reached Congress where legislation has been ...
Mexican wolf F521 was born in captivity at the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo in Colorado Springs, Colo., in 1997 as part of the Mexican Wolf Recovery Program managed by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Later, ...
An endangered Mexican gray wolf named Taylor has repeatedly traveled north of a designated recovery area in New Mexico. Some advocates say the wolves' movements indicate a need to expand their ...
An endangered Mexican gray wolf has run north again two weeks after New Mexico’s Department of Game and Fish moved him south. On Saturday, male wolf 3065 was located north of Interstate 40 outside of ...
The male wolf, a yearling from the Copper Creek pack, is the offspring of wolves blamed for livestock attacks in Grand County last year After one of Colorado’s gray wolves wandered into New Mexico, ...