Oregon’s famous wandering wolf OR-7 may soon be dropping off the maps. State wildlife officials announced that they don’t plan to recollar the wolf – meaning that his future travels across the West ...
Wolves have killed far more cattle this year in Oregon, but the state hasn’t allocated funding to properly compensate ...
BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) -- Oregon’s wolf population is on the rise, reaching its highest numbers in years and fueling hope for species recovery among conservationists, but for farmers facing ongoing ...
Wolves west of those three highways in Oregon are under federal protection. Molloy ordered the federal Fish and Wildlife Service to reconsider its decision, but the ruling doesn’t confer ESA ...
PORTLAND, Ore.— Oregon’s wolf population grew by 15% in 2024, marking the first year of double-digit growth since 2019, according to a report released today by the state Department of Fish and ...
SALEM, Ore. -- Oregon Gov. Kate Brown signed a controversial bill into law Tuesday morning that affirms her agency’s decision to remove wolves from the state endangered species list. House Bill 4040 ...
The number of wolves in Oregon grew to a minimum of 204 animals in 2024, the first meaningful population growth in nearly four years, according to the annual wolf report released April 11. The number ...
Oregon’s wolf population continues to grow and expand into western Oregon, but poaching of the predators remains concerning to authorities. The minimum number of Oregon wolves at the end of 2024 was ...
U.S. Rep. Cliff Bentz once again is pushing to remove the gray wolf from the Endangered Species Act. The Oregon Republican, whose district covers the entire eastern half of the state, said Wednesday ...
Oregon wildlife officials counted more gray wolves than ever last winter, a promising sign for the federally endangered species. Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife staff counted 204 wolves in ...
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Wolf restoration on hold: What a controversial state decision means for US wildlife
Gray wolves were once plentiful in Colorado. As settlers moved west and hunted the gray wolves’ natural prey, such as bison ...
GRANTS PASS, Ore. - As long as wolves have been making their comeback, biologists and ranchers have had a decidedly Old West option for dealing with those that develop a taste for beef: Shoot to kill.
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