Wolf Territory Is Expanding in Southwest Oregon Earlier this month, a man in Jacksonville, Ore., Sam Dodenhoff, captured an image of the first confirmed gray wolf west of Highway 62 in Southern Oregon, the Mail Tribune reported.
Wildlife Conservation Groups Release Attacks Ads Against Gov. Kate Brown, Urging Stronger Leadership on Wolf Plan Wildlife conservation groups Oregon Wild and the Center for Biological Diversity today released an attack ad against Gov. Kate Brown criticizing her stance on gray wolves.
Amid Blowback, Gov. Kate Brown Says She Opposes Removal of Gray Wolves From Endangered Species List Gov. Kate Brown today pulled back Oregon’s support of delisting the gray wolf from the Endangered Species list.
Congressman Calls Oregon’s Support of Removing Gray Wolf From Endangered Species Act a “Death Sentence” U.S. Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Oregon) today sent a letter to Gov. Kate Brown and the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission condemning support from the state’s top wildlife official to remove the gray wolf from the Endangered Species list.
Oregon On Board With Federal Plan to Remove Gray Wolf From Endangered Species List On Thursday, May 9, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife’s director, Curtis Melcher, sent a letter to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife service in support of the agency’s proposal to remove the gray wolf from the Endangered Species list.
Readers Respond to Gov. Kate Brown’s Nomination of a Big Game Hunter to the Fish and Wildlife Commission “These commissions may be low profile, but they are making critical decisions about what kind of state we want to be, and I want science and conservation to have seats at the table.”
Wildlife Conservationists Plan Attack Ads Against Gov. Kate Brown After Appointment of Big Game Hunter to Wolf Management Board Local conservation organization Oregon Wild is raising funds for an attack ad against the governor.
Oregon Wolf Population Grows, But Conservation Groups Remain Critical of State Policy Oregon’s wolf population saw a modest increase of 10 percent in 2018. That’s according to the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife’s most recent annual report, which counts 137 wolves in the state—up 13 animals from 2017.
Oregon Now Has 124 Documented Wolves in a Dozen Packs According to a report released Thursday by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, there are now 124 documented wolves in Oregon—an 11 percent increase in population size from 2017.