Mexican Wolves in the Wild The Mexican Wolf Reintroduction Project Reintroduction of the Mexican gray wolf into the Blue Range Wolf Recovery Area (BRWRA) of Arizona and New Mexico was initiated in March 1998. Mexican wolves released into the BRWRA and their offspring are designated as a nonessential experimental population which allows for greater management flexibility to address wolf conflict …
We still need to let Oregon hear we are not happy!
Michelle Dennehy or Richard HargraveOregon Fish and WildlifeMichelle.N.Dennehy@state.or.us or Richard.J.Hargrave@state.or.us(503) 947-6022 or (503) 947-6020 We still need to Let Michelle and Richard hear that we are not happy with their failures to review their plan effectively! Source: Depredations lead to lethal control for wolves in Wallowa County
Life and Legacy of OR4, Oregon’s Most Celebrated Wild Wolf – Men’s Journal
On March 31, OR4, a wolf named and tagged by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW), was shot and killed by officials along with his current mate, OR39, and their two-year-old pups. Wildlife officials had determined that they had killed four calves and a sheep on private pastureland during March. Under the current Oregon wolf management plan, that …
Wildlife Manages itself much more efficiently without human involvement
How long will it take for us as a race to learn that Wildlife survives better on their Own without the interference of Humans? Before European settlement nearly 2 million wolves roamed wild in North America. Rampant poaching, Poisoning, trapping began early in the 19th century and decimated their numbers. By 1973, only a few hundred remained in the lower 48 …