These charismatic canids were eradicated from the American West by the mid-1900s at the behest of the livestock industry. Science now tells us that wolves are critical to the health of the landscapes that they inhabit. WildEarth Guardians uses a variety of tools, including policy advocacy, public education and litigation to advance the cause of weaving wolves back into the heart of the American West.
In the Southern Rocky Mountains (i.e. south central Wyoming, western Colorado and north central New Mexico), we are working to foment the recovery of gray wolves. Science shows the region could host over 1,000 wolves, but reintroduction may be necessary to jump start recovery. We think that Rocky Mountain National Park and surrounding federal lands, totaling about over two million acres, could provide a strong foothold for wolves in the Southern Rockies.
In the Gila Bioregion of southwestern New Mexico and southeastern Arizona, we strive to ensure that Mexican wolves flourish, in the face of illegal killings and government removals. Working to rekindle and protect the tiny population of Mexican wolves in the Southwest, WildEarth Guardians has joined with other groups to launch www.mexicanwolves.org.
To make the West safe for wolves, WildEarth Guardians is working to:
Restore an ecologically effective wolf population to the Southern Rockies, through litigation and public outreach.
The Fish and Wildlife Agency's proposal to remove Endangered Species Act protections from the gray wolf is premature, ill advised and has me howlin' mad. The first major wildlife decision made under your leadership is based on bad science and bad policy.