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- Gray Wolves in North America - U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service
In the case of the gray wolf, the species was extirpated from all the Lower 48 States, except for several hundred wolves in northeastern Minnesota and a small population on Isle Royale, Michigan, at the time it was listed as endangered
- Wolf Timeline hmtl - Animal Legal Historical Center
Gray wolves are taken from Canada and reintroduced in the United States to create three non-essential experimental populations in Idaho, Wyoming, and Montana The reintroduction of wolves in Yellowstone leads to renewed public interest in gray wolves
- Gray wolf timeline | International Wolf Center
April – The wolf population in Washington state grew by an estimated 11 percent, or 19 animals The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife estimates the state has an 145 wolves in 26 packs
- LibGuides: Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) Fact Sheet: Population . . .
Maintain managed care population and re-establish wild population (at least 100 individuals) over a 5,000 square mile area within the historic range of the subspecies
- Washington Gray Wolf Conservation and Management 2024 Annual Report
This document details the results of its annual gray wolf (Canis lupus) population survey and summarizes wolf recovery and management activities from the previous year
- Wolf distribution - Wikipedia
The wolves in the study formed 3 clades: north Asian wolves that included those from northern China and eastern Russia, Himalayan wolves from the Tibetan Plateau, and a unique population from southern China
- Historical Gray Wolf geographic range maps. - Protect The Wolves™
Once found throughout much of North America, gray wolf populations within the contiguous United States were almost extirpated, but some populations in Canada, Alaska, and Mexico have remained largely intact (Young and Goldman 1944, Leopold et al 1981)
- Mexican Gray Wolf :: Museum of Southwestern Biology | The University of . . .
Wolf populations suffered severe declines and they became very scarce due to this deliberate extermination, as well as habitat loss (Ballantyne, 2022) By the 1930s, they were almost completely absent from the western United States
- Canis lupus : Gray Wolf | Rare Species Guide | Minnesota DNR
Wolves were almost completely eliminated from the western United States by the 1930s In Wisconsin and Michigan, wolves were eliminated by the mid-1960s At that time, only a small number of wolves survived in northeastern Minnesota and on Isle Royale in Michigan, though large populations remained in Canada and Alaska
- Grey Wolf – Historical Profile | Human Wildlife Ecology
More than 5,000 wolves were killed in the first year of this eradication effort (Emerson, 2016b) By the 1930’s wolves were almost extirpated from all western states with only a few animals remaining and very few viable breeding packs
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