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Wolf numbers are up in Oregon
After several years of mostly stagnant growth, the number of wolves in Oregon increased last year, a new report shows, even as the total number of attacks on livestock declined. Why it matters: The ...
A federal judge on Tuesday, Aug. 5, ordered the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to reconsider its decision last year that gray wolves in several states, including the eastern one-third of Oregon, don’t ...
SALEM, Ore. (KTVZ) -- The minimum known count of wolves in Oregon at the end of 2024 was 204 wolves, up from 178 last year, according to the Oregon Wolf Conservation and Management annual report ...
VALLEY FALLS, Ore. (KTVZ) — The Trump administration is moving to permanently delist the gray wolf from the Endangered Species Act, a decision spotlighting the struggles of a Southern Oregon ranch ...
(Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife/Contributed Photo) A federal judge on Tuesday, Aug. 5, ordered the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to reconsider its decision last year that gray wolves in ...
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 ...
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 ...
Wolf advocates told a federal judge June 18 that wolves in the northern Rocky Mountains should have federal protection until wolves are established in Colorado, Utah, Arizona and New Mexico, too.
A federal judge in Missoula on Tuesday vacated the federal government’s determination that gray wolves in the Western United States do not need increased federal protections under the Endangered ...
A bill to delist gray wolves cleared a major hurdle Dec. 18 when the U.S House of Representatives narrowly passed the measure to remove the predator from the Endangered Species Act and give wolf ...
In the case of wolves, where might that 2,000-5,000 figure apply? Do we need a minimum viable population in the three states where wolves were reintroduced back in 1995? Or should the figure be spread ...
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