As depredation numbers rise, California wildlife experts work with ranchers to strike a balance between protecting gray wolves and preserving cattle.
California wildlife officials recently outfitted 12 gray wolves with satellite collars, allowing enhanced monitoring of the population that has started to take off in recent years.
Tulare County’s gray wolves, collectively known as the Yowlumni pack, are a family that was counted by the California ...
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife officials confirmed wolf OR158 was lethally removed by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service ...
The wolves were captured from and released back to three packs in Siskiyou, Lassen and Sierra counties, state wildlife ...
Fourteen years after the first gray wolf, known as OR-7, was spotted in California in a century, the population has grown to ...
The Mexican gray wolf population has increased 11% from the previous year, according to a wolf count report released by the ...
CDFW Statewide Gray Wolf Coordinator Axel Hunnicutt said the ... Seven of the wolves were female and five were male, officials said. They included five from the Neyem Seyo pack in Sierra County ...