News

While both Arizona ranchers and conservationists mourn the endangered Mexican gray wolf mistakenly killed, they disagree on ...
The killing of Asiza is extremely upsetting, both for her family and for (lobo mexicano) supporters across the country.” ...
The government intended to kill an uncollared wolf but instead killed a collared female wolf, who may have been pregnant.
Biologists from the Arizona Game and Fish Department and its conservation partners are now actively engaged in spring Mexican ...
Mexican gray wolf conservation remains a concern in Arizona, but in some of the same areas, prairie dogs create new issues.
A federal agency “mistakenly” killed an endangered and possibly pregnant Mexican gray wolf in Arizona, the U.S. Fish and ...
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says it killed a Mexican Gray Wolf in Arizona by mistake last week. Wildlife advocates are ...
A government hunter mistakenly killed a Mexican gray wolf that was expected to give birth to pups soon, according to federal records associated with the April 14 incident.
The population of wild Mexican wolves in the Southwest has reached a new milestone, now totaling 286, according to a joint ...
Endangered Mexican wolves will continue to be kept south of Interstate 40, after a federal judge in Tucson upheld the current ...
After being delayed a day, Colorado Parks and Wildlife published the April wolf activity map that shows extensive travel from ...
Wolf’s words: “Shemar Stewart is one of the freakiest freaks Wolf’s Freak Show has ever seen. Watching him on tape is like ...