State and federal wildlife agencies counted 319 endangered Mexican gray wolves across Arizona and New Mexico this past year. Up from 286 the previous year, it marks a decade of steady recovery.
At least one of Colorado’s gray wolves had made its way into a watershed that crosses through Pueblo County, according to a ...
The Arizona and New Mexico wildlife agencies today jointly announced that the number of endangered Mexican gray wolves in the Southwest grew by 33 last year — to 319 in 2025 from 286 in 2024.
The number of Mexican gray wolves in Arizona and New Mexico grew to at least 319 in 2025, as the species inches closer to possible downlisting from endangered to threatened.
Colorado’s wolves made their first appearance within some southern Front Range watersheds in February.  Colorado Parks and ...
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) recently completed helicopter capture operations resulting in the ...
Gray wolves adapt their diets as a result of climate change, eating harder foods such as bones to extract nutrition during warmer climates, new research has found. The study, led by the University of ...
Alaska's wolf man, Frank Glaser, spent more than four decades in Alaska tracking and trapping wolves. Here's his take on wolf attacks.