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Biden administration brings back threatened species protections helping Oregon wolves, wolverines and spotted owls
Biden administration brings back threatened species protections helping Oregon wolves, wolverines and spotted owls
Biden administration brings back threatened species protections helping Oregon wolves, wolverines and spotted owls

Published on: 03/28/2024

This news was posted by Oregon Today News

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OR30 cooling off in a pond in the Wenaha Pack area, captured on a remote camera on U.S. Forest Service land in northern Wallowa County in June, 2019. Photo courtesy of ODFW.Wolf pups from the Wenaha Pack, May 30, 2012. Photo courtesy of ODFWA Male wolf from Wenaha pack was fitted with a radio collar on Aug. 4, 2010. Photo courtesy of ODFW.OR25, a yearling male in the Imnaha Pack, after being radio-collared on May 20, 2014. Photo courtesy of ODFW.Oregon’s first radio-collared wolf just after its release, with ear tags and a radio collar. Photo taken May 3, 2009. Photo courtesy of ODFW.A pup of the Wenaha wolf pack. Photo taken by ODFW during summer 2014 in Wallowa County.The breeding male of the new Chesnimnus Pack caught on camera during the winter survey on U.S. Forest Service land in northern Wallowa County in December 2018. Photo courtesy of ODFW.OR16, a member of the Walla Walla pack, after being radio-collared Nov. 1, 2012 north of Elgin in Union County. Photo courtesy of ODFW.A image from a video taken on July 25, 2012 in the Snake River Wildlife Management Unit (Wallowa County). Photo courtesy of ODFW.The breeding male of the Walla Walla Pack captured on a remote camera on private property in northern Umatilla County in February, 2019. Photo courtesy of ODFWSnake River pack captured by a remote camera photo taken February 2017 in Hells Canyon National Recreation Area. Photo courtesy of ODFWTwo wolves from the newly discovered Middle Fork Pack on U.S. Forest Service land in the Imnaha WMU in Wallowa County in December 2017. Photo courtesy of ODFWA wolf of the Wenaha Pack captured on a remote camera on U.S. Forest Service land in northern Wallowa County in February 2017. Photo courtesy of ODFW.A subadult Wenaha wolf stretches in the snow in front of a remote camera in the Wenaha Wildlife Management Unit on April 13, 2013. Photo courtesy of ODFWFive wolf pups from the Imnaha pack were photographed by a remote camera on July 7, 2013.  The pups were approximately 2.5 months old in this photo.  Photo courtesy of ODFWImnaha wolf pack pups, born mid-April 2012. Image taken by remote camera on July 8, 2012 on U.S. Forest Service land southeast of Joseph, Ore. Photo courtesy of ODFWPhoto of a young wolf from the Walla Walla Pack taken on Feb 5, 2014. Photo courtesy of ODFWTrack in the north Keating Wildlife Management Unit, Baker County, Fall 2007. A wolf's hind foot is smaller in size and generally placed in front of the front foot when trotting.  Photo courtesy of ODFW.OR42, the breeding female of the Chesnimnus Pack, had her failed radio-collar replaced on Feb. 23, 2017 in the Chesnimnus WMU in northern Wallowa County. Photo courtesy of ODFWA 100 lb adult male wolf was GPS radio-collared in the Mt Emily unit on 5/25/2014.  Photo courtesy of ODFWTracks in the north Keating Wildlife Management Unit, Baker County, Fall 2007. The trackset is from a single trotting wolf.  Photo courtesy of ODFW.OR12, a male wolf from the Wenaha pack, after he was GPS-collared on April 2, 2012 in northwestern Wallowa County. OR12 weighed 94 pounds and is currently the only collared wolf in the Wenaha pack. Photo courtesy of ODFWOR14 was captured and GPS-collared by ODFW in the Weston Mountain area north of the Umatilla River on June 20, 2012. OR14 is one of two known wolves using the area. OR14 weighed 90 pounds and was estimated to be at least 6 years old. Photo courtesy of ODFWOn June 10, 2012, ODFW trapped OR-13, a two-year-old wolf of the Wenaha pack, and fitted it with a GPS radio-collar. The black female weighed 85 pounds and was captured in the Wenaha Wildlife Management Unit. Photo courtesy of ODFWOR21, a yearling in the Wenaha pack, after being radio-collared June 3, 2013 in northern Wallowa County.  Photo courtesy of ODFWAssistant wolf biologist, Roblyn Brown, monitors the Imnaha pack alpha male as he wakes up from anesthesia. Photo courtesy of ODFW. Photo courtesy of ODFWThe Imnaha wolf pack’s alpha male after being refitted with a working GPS collar on May 19, 2011. Photo courtesy of ODFW

The Biden administration on Thursday restored rules to protect imperiled plants and animals that had been rolled back under former President Donald Trump.

News Source : https://www.oregonlive.com/environment/2024/03/biden-administration-brings-back-threatened-species-protections-helping-oregon-wolves-wolverines-and-spotted-owls.html

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