Mexican gray wolves are venturing north of their designated recovery zone, settling near Mount Taylor, about 90 miles west of Albuquerque.
An endangered Mexican gray wolf named Taylor has once again returned to his namesake mountain west of Albuquerque after ...
A male Mexican gray wolf has returned to an area near Grants after being taken back to an experimental population area in New ...
Taylor, a Mexican gray wolf, has left his recovery area three times now and some advocates say he's trying to tell us ...
The wandering male Mexican gray wolf “Taylor” was spotted west of Albuquerque this week, the third time this particular wolf ...
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.— Thirty-five conservation organizations today asked the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service not to recapture a Mexican gray wolf who crossed Interstate 40 in New Mexico over the weekend.
Another Mexican grey wolf is defying government orders and traveling outside the borders of the official population area. A wild wolf territory was established in the 1990s, ...
Conservation groups this week criticized New Mexico wildlife officials for the recent capture and relocation of “Taylor,” a wandering male Mexican gray wolf, back to a protected zone in the Gila ...
An endangered Mexican gray wolf has run north again two weeks after New Mexico's Department of Game and Fish moved him south.
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