Gray wolves are fighting for survival, and they need your help. The actions we take today will shape their future in the wild.
Gray wolves were absent from Colorado's wilderness for 80 years, largely due to the near impossibility of surviving Wyoming's extensive 'predator zone,' where they could be killed at any time by any means. To restore ecological balance, the Rocky Mountain Wolf Project led an initiative to reintroduce wolves to Colorado.
In November 2020, voters approved Proposition 114, making Colorado the first state to legislate wildlife reintroduction. Thank you Coloradans! The first 10 wolves, captured in Oregon, were released in December 2023, with more releases planned.
Coloradans have the power to help save wolves both in Colorado and across the country by supporting strong federal and state endangered species protections. Wolves can’t speak or vote—but we can.
Today, gray wolves live in small, fragmented populations, occupying only a fraction of their historical range. The Endangered Species Act has been crucial in protecting them from hunting and trapping. However, in the Northern Rockies, wolves have already lost federal protections, leading to widespread slaughter. New legislation threatens to strip protections from gray wolf populations across the U.S., putting even more wolves at risk.
Don’t be misled by its name. The Trust the Science Act (H.R. 764/S. 1895) would remove federal protections for gray wolves across the U.S. and prevent courts from overturning the decision. It passed the House and is now in the Senate. Another bill, the Department of the Interior Appropriations Act (H.R. 8998), includes a rider to strip protections from wolves in the lower 48 states. Bills like these keep coming, constantly threatening the future of wolves. We must stay vigilant and use our voices to ensure these dangerous laws never take effect.
The removal of federal protections in the Northern Rockies has shifted wolf management to individual states, where laws often cater to trophy hunting interests. In Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming, hundreds of wolves are slaughtered each year in brutal trophy hunts. In Wisconsin, when protections were briefly lifted, trophy hunters killed 218 wolves in less than three days. If more wolves lose protections, we could see similar tragedies unfold across the country.
It’s not just gray wolves at risk. Around 250 critically endangered Mexican gray wolves (‘lobos’) in Arizona and New Mexico are facing similar legislative threats, while fewer than 20 wild red wolves are known to exist in North Carolina, making them the world’s most endangered wolves. The urgency to protect America’s wolves could not be greater.
No matter where you live, your voice and your vote are essential to protecting wolves. Take action now—before it’s too late.
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