Marin Independent Journal

Groups ask court to restore protection­s for US gray wolves

- By Matthew Brown

BILLINGS, MONT. » Wildlife advocates on Thursday asked a federal court to overturn a U.S. government decision that stripped Endangered Species Act protection­s for wolves across most of the nation.

Two coalitions of advocacy groups filed lawsuits in U.S. District Court in Northern California seeking to restore safeguards for a predator that is revered by wildlife watchers but feared by many livestock producers.

The Trump administra­tion announced just days ahead of the Nov. 3 election that wolves were considered recovered. They had been wiped out out across most of the U.S. by the 1930s under government-sponsored poisoning and trapping campaigns.

A remnant population in the western Great Lakes region has since expanded to some 4,400 wolves in Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin.

More than 2,000 occupy six states in the Northern Rockies and Pacific Northwest after wolves from Canada were reintroduc­ed in Idaho and Yellowston­e National Park starting in 1995. Protection­s for wolves in the Rockies were lifted over the last decade and hunting of them is allowed.

But wolves remain absent across most of their historical range and the groups that filed Thursday’s lawsuits said continued protection­s are needed so wolf population­s can continue to expand in California and other states.

The lawsuits could complicate an effort to reintroduc­e wolves in sparsely populated western Colorado under a November initiative approved by voters, a state official told wildlife commission­ers Thursday. If endangered species protection­s were restored, wolves would again fall under authority of the federal government, not the state.

In response to the lawsuits, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service spokeswoma­n Vanessa Kauffman said in a statement that the gray wolf “has exceeded all conservati­on goals for recovery” and is no longer threatened or endangered under federal law.

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