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Wildlife officials say the population of endangered Mexican gray wolves has increased following a recent count in Arizona and New Mexico.
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Wildlife officials say nine endangered Mexican gray wolves are known to have died in the final quarter of last year.
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Federal wildlife officials say they’ve captured an endangered Mexican gray wolf in New Mexico after it strayed outside of its recovery area.
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Arizona wildlife officials say nine endangered Mexican gray wolves were reported dead in the third quarter of this year.
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Federal wildlife officials have released a female Mexican gray wolf back into the wild after she was captured in northern New Mexico in January. The endangered animal had ventured hundreds of miles from the species’ designated area.
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Arizona wildlife officials say they’ve introduced 16 captive-born endangered Mexican gray wolf pups to wild dens.
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Officials with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have killed an endangered Mexican gray wolf in western New Mexico.
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The number of Mexican gray wolves in Arizona and New Mexico surged in 2022. A new survey says this is the first time the population has topped 200 since a reintroduction program began in 1998 aimed at saving the endangered animal.
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The population of wild Mexican gray wolves in the Southwest has exceeded 200 for the first time since the species was reintroduced 25 years ago. Wildlife officials confirmed the numbers in their annual count of the endangered animals.
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Conservation groups are urging wildlife officials to allow a female endangered Mexican gray wolf to continue wandering in northern New Mexico.