It seems like they are never far from the top of the controversy list when it comes to Montana wildlife and what they bring to (or take from) the table.
If you think you're the only one with cabin fever, guess again. New video shared by a tour group shows a grey wolf living her best life in the Yellowstone snow.
If you're fortunate, you might hear wolves howl next time you visit Yellowstone National Park. But, you're not likely to hear them all the way in downtown West Yellowstone unless you were there a few mornings ago.
On Tuesday, November 19, 2019, two wolves from the Junction Butte Pack were fatally hit around sunset on the road between Tower Junction and the Northeast Entrance.
The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service is proposing to return management and protection of gray wolves to state wildlife professionals.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service today proposed to remove the gray wolf from the list of threatened and endangered species.
The highly contested debate of whether wolves should run free or be hunted is going to get a little hotter. E.L.K Inc., a sporting goods store in Gardiner, posted a photo album of dead sheep. The owner of the sheep that were killed the other day said that 18 of his 34 sheep were killed. The wolves did not hunt for food. They hunted for sport!
Gov. Steve Bullock and wildlife officials say they now have the right rules in place as the state seeks to reduce the predator's population to about 400 animals statewide.