25 Years of Lobo Recovery (NFTF)
The 25th anniversary of Mexican gray wolf reintroduction in the southwest is upon us. Although there have been laudable successes, the population still faces persecution and other threats today.
The 25th anniversary of Mexican gray wolf reintroduction in the southwest is upon us. Although there have been laudable successes, the population still faces persecution and other threats today.
We are thrilled to announce the launch of a new Project Coyote campaign, #CaptureCoexistence, which aims to leverage the power and influence of the nature photography industry by unifying our voices to call for an end to inhumane and ecologically destructive wildlife killing contests (WKCs)!
While applauding the record-breaking Mexican wolf population announced today by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (“Service”), conservation groups noted that, with lobos, it is not just the total numbers that matter.
In human-dominated landscapes, landscape architecture can be an important conservation tool.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service yesterday unveiled its proposed rule to designate the soon-to-be-reintroduced wolf population in Colorado as a “nonessential experimental” population under the Endangered Species Act.