Gray wolf reintroduction and protection – the wild needs wolves!
Protecting and Reintroducing Wolves
Vision
We know that wolves need the wild and the wild needs wolves.
We believe wolves should be allowed to work their ecological magic. Wolves should be present on the landscape in sufficient numbers to keep elk and deer alert and moving, allowing willow and aspen regrowth and supporting healthy streams and songbird habitat, and creating a host of other positive cascading effects throughout the ecosystem.
Strategies

On the Ground

In the Southwest

In New Mexico

In the Northern Rockies

In the Southern Rockies

In the Gila
Accomplishments
In spring 2018, Guardians won our challenge to inadequate protections for Mexican wolves. We are currently challenging the woefully flawed 2017 Mexican wolf recovery plan.
In December, 2015 we won our challenge to the federal wildlife killing agency, Wildlife Services’, wolf killing plans in Washington state.
In April 2014, Guardians brokered the first voluntary grazing permit retirement on the Gila National Forest, returning nearly 50 square miles of wolf country to the wild. We have another permit retirement agreement signed and are collaborating with ranchers across the region to resolve resource challenges and recover the Mexican wolf.
Throughout 2014, Guardians tabled for wolves at 46 events in Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico, collecting 2,587 postcards asking Interior Sec. Sally Jewell to maintain endangered species protection for wolves and taking 252 “Kids Love Wolves” photos.
Guardians rallied wolf supporters to testify at two Mexican wolf hearings to improve protections for the wolves; one in Pinetop, Arizona, and one in Truth or Consequences, New Mexico. Pro-wolf speakers outnumbered anti-wolf speakers 2 to 1. We subsequently won our challenge to the Fish and Wildlife Service’s inadequate protections for Mexican wolves.
In February 2012, Guardians helped convince the Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks commission not to extend a wolf-hunting season in the West Fork of the Bitterroot.
In April 2011, Guardians secured a legal settlement on the Gila National Forest in New Mexico that requires the Forest Service to more carefully consider the needs of wolves in key areas.
How You Can Help
Help protect the incredible, vulnerable wildlife of the West! Be a guardian for the wild by joining the conversation, learning about current issues, and making your voice heard. Together, we're a powerful force for nature.
Recent Stories From Wildlife

The doctor is in
Samantha Ruscavage-Barz lays down the law for the Wild as WildEarth Guardians legal director

Colorado residents are howling for wolves to return
As Prop 114’s promise of paws on the ground draws closer, there is a profound sense of hope and excitement for the return of wolves

Colorado residents are howling for wolves to return
As Prop 114’s promise of paws on the ground draws closer, there is a profound sense of hope and excitement for the return of wolves

The doctor is in
Samantha Ruscavage-Barz lays down the law for the Wild as WildEarth Guardians legal director
Wildlife Press
New Colorado poll: Don’t trophy hunt or trap gray wolves
64% of Colorado voters across all political affiliations and geographic areas believe that trophy hunting of wolves should not be allowed
Read more >Alma ‘Rosie’ Sanchez: Restoration plan will help us live alongside wolves again
The past three years of my life have been spent talking to people about wolves returning to Colorado. I heard people’s fears and the potential impact on individuals’ livelihood and way of life. I also heard excitement about the possible benefits of returning a native carnivore and living ancestor to their home.
Read more >Five conservation groups sue over Fish & Wildlife Commission’s inaction on wolves
After Washington’s Fish and Wildlife Commission voted last month not to enact a new rule to manage wolf-livestock conflicts, five conservation groups filed a lawsuit to try to force the commission to take action.
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