SAVE THE DATE TO SAVE THE WOLVES!

The Fish and Wildlife Service will hold an important public scoping meeting in Flagstaff on November 26, 2007 as part of a rule change process that will determine the future of Mexican gray wolves in Arizona and New Mexico.

Mexican gray wolves are critical to our natural environment! A healthy wolf population will keep our elk and deer herds healthy and bring balance back to our wildlands. This process is our chance to correct the mistakes of the past and ensure a bright future for wolf recovery, and your participation is vital. There are only 59 Mexican gray wolves in the Blue Range Wolf Recovery Area!  Help us, help them!

Change the Rule to Save the Wolves
While reintroduced wolves have thrived in the Northern Rockies - now numbering over 1,500 - the Mexican gray wolf population remains dangerously low, with only about 59 wolves in an area twice the size of Yellowstone. The difference is in the rules governing the program. Because of these rules, 11 wolves have been shot by the government, 20 more died inadvertently because of capture, and at least 24 have been trapped and permanently removed from the wild since the reintroduction began.

Examples of how the rules counteract recovery
Northern Rockies wolves are allowed to expand their territory. Mexican gray wolves are confined to the Blue Range Wolf Recovery Area, which includes the Gila National Forest in New Mexico and the bordering Apache National Forest in Arizona.  But with good habitat outside of these areas, wolves often cross the political lines in search of new homes and prey.  When they choose to live outside the boundaries, they are captured and relocated back into the Blue Range Wolf Recovery Area, which thwarts expansion of the population, disrupts packs,  and sometimes causes serious injuries to individual wolves.

Current rules do not require ranchers using public lands to remove or render inedible (as by lime, for example) the carcasses of livestock that die for a number of non-wolf related reasons like disease and starvation.  Wolves are attracted to and often scavenge on these carcasses, and then begin to prey on live cattle or horses nearby.   After three livestock kills in a year, the wolf is either killed or placed in captivity. The gray wolf reintroduction rule for the northern Rocky Mountains in Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho required ranchers to remove such “attractants” and specified that wolves that prey on stock near to where they were drawn by carcasses would not be “controlled.”  But the Mexican wolf never received this protection. 

These are just two examples of problems with the rules. Your attendance at the meeting is critical to the future of the Lobo in the southwest!  It is extremely important that we send a clear message to the decision makers that the citizens of New Mexico and Arizona want the Lobo to stay and make a full recovery.

For more information, go to: www.mexicangraywolf.org or contact Paula Lewis at paula@gcwolfrecovery.org 928-202-1325. 

Please mark your calendar and spread the word to your friends and families.

Save the Date & Save the Wolves!
November 26, 2007
Radisson Woodlands
Flagstaff, AZ 
5:00 – 9:00 pm

You are also encouraged to submit written comments for the scoping process.  They can be submitted via any of the options below.  Deadline to comment is December 31, 2007.  Be sure to include “Attn: Mexican Gray Wolf NEPA Scoping", your full name and your return address in your message.

MAIL
Brian Millsap, State Administrator
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
New Mexico Ecological Services Field Office
2105 Osuna NE
Albuquerque, NM  87113

FAX
(505) 346–2542
EMAIL
r2fwe_al@fws.gov
ONLINE
www.mexicanwolfeis.org

 Background Information on the Scoping Process:
(available in downloadable PDF file) download Acrobat Reader here

1. Copy of the Federal Register Rule for Mexican Gray Wolf (pdf)

2. Eight Key Talking Points, Condensed Summary of Key Issues (pdf)

Want to Help!

Feel free to download the Meeting Notice/Flyer and Distribute it to Friends You Know
Download It Here!!! (pdf)