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Two new wolf packs have been spotted in Northern California, which shows a continued resurgence of the species a century after they disappeared from the Golden State.
Two new wolf packs were confirmed by wildlife officials this month, and explosive population growth could be around the corner. Two new wolf packs confirmed in California amid population boom Skip ...
The last known wolf in California was killed in 1924 in Lassen County in the northern part of the state. ... Research at the University of California, Davis found that a significant part of wolves ...
OR-7, California's first resident wolf in over 80 years. In late December 2011, OR-7, a male gray wolf from Oregon, became the first confirmed wild wolf in California since 1924, when wolves were considered extirpated from the state. The first resident wolf pack was confirmed in 2015, after two adults migrated from Oregon and had five pups ...
A newly announced pack in the Sequoia National Forest is more than 200 miles south of the nearest known pack. Wolf packs roaming deeper into California. How likely is it you’ll see one in the wild?
In 2011, Wolf OR-7 became the first wolf to return to California. As of 2024, the state has at least four breeding packs: the Lassen Pack, Beckwourth Pack, the Whaleback Pack, and the Yowlumni Pack. A fifth pack, the Shasta Pack, was last detected in 2015. [142] [143]
The Lassen Pack, which lives in Lassen National Forest, is California's second pack since wolves were eradicated from the state in the 1920s. [46] In June 2017, CDFW biologists fitted the female of the Lassen Pack breeding pair with a tracking collar. [47] OR-85 is a male wolf that traveled from Oregon to Siskiyou County in November 2020.
A new pack of gray wolves has been identified in Northern California, becoming the third pack to establish itself in the state in the last century, state wildlife officials and conservationists said.