
Survey: Mexican wolf population remains stagnant
That population grows, but by just one animal. Officials say numbers not what they had hoped for, to focus on improving genetics of wild population as way to build more robust numbers.
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That population grows, but by just one animal. Officials say numbers not what they had hoped for, to focus on improving genetics of wild population as way to build more robust numbers.

They say artificial insemination holds promise for the Mexican wolf as well as other species that are close to extinction.

Officials estimate recovery could take another two decades and nearly $180 million.

Marks the first time in a decade that efforts by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to curb livestock attacks by wolves has had lethal consequences for one of the predators.

Since conservation of the Mexican gray wolf began in the 1980s, the Arizona agency has spent more than $7 million on recovery efforts.

Document calls for focusing recovery of wolves in core areas of predators’ historic range.

Cross-fostering project aimed at boosting genetic diversity among wolves in the wild in New Mexico and Arizona.

Marks most in any single year since federal government began reintroducing the predators in New Mexico, Arizona in 1998
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