More than 500 wolves were just wiped out in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming.
Gray wolf in Yellowstone National Park
Center for     Biological     Diversity   

John,

With your help, last week the Center and our allies won a landmark court decision restoring Endangered Species Act protection to most gray wolves in the United States, shielding them once again from hunting sanctioned by the states. But the ruling doesn’t help the wolves of the northern Rockies, who are still being “managed” — that is, massacred — in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming.

This hunting and trapping season alone, those three states have already slaughtered more than 500 wolves — at least 24 right outside Yellowstone National Park — by some of the most brutal means ever, including painful strangulation snares. 

Take action to save the hundreds of wolves who will fall without swift support.

After we filed an emergency petition, the Biden administration admitted northern Rockies wolves are in danger — but it hasn’t stopped the killing. Only restored federal protection can do that.

Join the outcry: Tell the administration not to leave these wolves out in the cold. They need the lifesaving protection of the Endangered Species Act before it’s too late.

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Photo of gray wolf in Yellowstone by doublejwebers/Flickr.



Center for Biological Diversity
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