From Kierán Suckling, Center for Biological Diversity <[email protected]>
Subject Yellowstone wolf-killings must stop
Date January 27, 2026 12:32 PM
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Hi John,

On or around Christmas Day, a female Yellowstone wolf is thought to have wandered alone across the park's boundary into Montana. She was later found dead.

An investigation is ongoing, but the cause is likely poaching. The targeting of Yellowstone's wolves must end.

Please help us fight for wolves and other species by giving today to the Future for the Wild Fund.

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Hunting Yellowstone wolves who cross into Montana is legal — but this killing occurred after a state-imposed quota had already been met.

The Center is in court to stop the massacring of wolves throughout the northern Rockies. While wolves are protected under the Endangered Species Act in most of the lower 48 states, in Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming they're fair game.

Wolves naturally wander to find food and mates. The Jackson Butte pack, to which this wolf belonged, has fallen victim to these kinds of attacks for years.

It's believed that the wolf who was just killed, known as 1478F, could have become a leader of that pack. Now she's gone, and the pack's suffering continues. The last matriarch died late in 2024, and another of her litter was killed by a hunter last September.

Montana breeds a culture of anti-wolf cruelty. It set a record-high level of wolves to be hunted during the current season: 458.

That's why the Center's lawsuit to secure federal protection for wolves in the northern Rockies is so crucial. The political giveaway that left wolves in the region without these safeguards has had tragic effects. We're trying to protect them for good.

Our fight to save wolves wherever they're in danger won't stop, and we need you with us.

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For the wild,

Kierán Suckling
Executive Director
Center for Biological Diversity

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