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Great Wolf Lodge's one-day-only 84-degree sale is back for 2025. Here's how to get a room starting at $84 per night and what ...
To catch a glimpse of an endangered Mexican gray wolf would usually require trekking into the wilds of the White Mountains, where most of Arizona’s packs roam. The Southwest Wildlife ...
According to a news release from the US Fish and Wildlife Service, a female Mexican wolf known as F2979 was found dead on Nov. 7 northwest of Flagstaff, Arizona.
A female Mexican gray wolf, which is federally protected under the Endangered Species Act, was found dead in an area northwest of Flagstaff, Arizona, on Nov. 7, according to the U.S. Fish and ...
A female Mexican gray wolf, which is protected by federal law under the Endangered Species Act, was found dead on Nov. 7 in an area northwest of Flagstaff, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and ...
A female Mexican gray wolf that a group of schoolchildren nicknamed Asha has been returned to the wilds of Arizona after she was found wandering in northern New Mexico outside of a zone set up for ...
A protected Mexican gray wolf named Hope was found dead on November 7 near Flagstaff, Arizona, prompting a significant reward for information leading to a conviction over her killing. The U.S ...
The Mexican wolf population in Arizona and New Mexico has grown for eight straight years, and the 2023 census revealed a minimum of 257 lobos distributed across the two states (144 in new Mexico ...
CLIFTON, AZ (AZFamily) — Federal agents admit they mistakenly killed an endangered wolf in eastern Arizona, which might have been pregnant after an order was given to kill a different wolf.
This Mexican gray wolf from the Eagle Creek pack in Eastern Arizona was captured for an examination during the annual wolf count. The healthy 8-year-old male was released back into the wild ...
The wolf was paired with a male to breed and produce offspring, but it proved to be unsuccessful. The decision was then made to release the Mexican wolf back to Arizona alone.
Jim deVos, the Mexican wolf coordinator for the Arizona Game and Fish Department, told KTAR News 92.3 FM that genetic diversity is the greatest challenge wolf managers are experiencing now.
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