Government and private groups are funding a $100,000 reward for information about the death of a Mexican gray wolf in Arizona ...
Mexican gray wolves are protected under the Endangered Species Act. Killing a Mexican wolf can result in criminal penalties ...
Environmental agencies and advocacy groups are offering a $100,000 reward for information that leads to a conviction in the ...
The wolf, known as Hope, was federally protected and killing this species of wolf could result in criminal penalties. Mexican ...
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says an endangered Mexican gray wolf was found dead west of Flagstaff last week.
A $103,500 reward is being offered for information on the death of a Mexican gray wolf west of Flagstaff. The wolf was being tracked for research purposes and had been named Hope by local students.
The wolf, known as F2979 by officials but named Hope by Arizona students, had been living north of Interstate 40 near ...
Wildlife advocacy groups are warning state and federal agencies that ongoing efforts to capture and relocate a pair of Mexican gray wolves near the Grand Canyon violate federal law, and the groups ...
New Mexico’s approach to management of the endangered Mexican gray wolf took center-stage at Friday’s Game and Fish ...
Wildlife advocacy groups argue that relocating two Mexican gray wolves near the Grand Canyon violates the Endangered Species ...
Nov. 8—"Wolves are a part of our world, and always have been." Mark Mattaini was one of several people who turned up at a Friday meeting of the New Mexico Game Commission in Las Cruces to talk about ...