Gray wolves are fighting for survival, and they need your help. The actions we take today will shape their future in the wild.
Both gray and red wolves once inhabited Missouri, but intensive hunting and trapping wiped them out. Red wolves lived in southern and eastern Missouri, with the last one recorded in Taney County in 1950. Occasionally, a gray wolf from a neighboring state will wander into Missouri, but these instances are rare. Missouri is home to the Endangered Wolf Center, founded in 1971 by Marlin Perkins and his wife Carol. Located near St. Louis, this leading conservation facility focuses on breeding and reintroducing endangered species, including red wolves and Mexican gray wolves. Even without a wild wolf population of our own, Missourians play a crucial role in the survival and recovery of wolves nationwide.
Today, gray wolves survive in just 10% of their historical range in the lower 48 states. The Endangered Species Act offers them the strongest legal protection, prohibiting hunting and trapping. However, wolves in the NorthernRockies have already lost these federal safeguards, and new legislation threatens others.
Don’t be deceived by the name. The Trust the Science Act (H.R. 764/S. 1895) aims to strip federal protections from gray wolves across the U.S. and prevent judicial review, meaning courts would have no power to overturn it. Having narrowly passed the House, it’s now under Senate consideration. Additionally, the Department of the Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2025 (H.R. 8998), currently circulating in Congress, includes a “rider” in Section 130 to remove federal protections from gray wolves in the lower 48 states.
Without federal protections, hundreds of wolves are slaughtered each year in Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming under extreme anti-wolf laws passed in these states. In Wisconsin, when federal protections were briefly lifted, trophy hunters killed 218 wolves in less than three days—more than double the allotted quota. If more wolves lose protections, we could see similar tragedies occur across the country.
Like gray wolves, the critically endangered Mexican gray wolves (‘lobos’) in Arizona and New Mexico are facing similar legislative threats, while red wolves in North Carolina are clinging perilously close to extinction in the wild. The urgency to protect America's wolves could not be greater.
Wolves can't vote, but you can. Your vote is incredibly powerful in shaping their future. Your vote can help save their lives.
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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