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The 2024 winter wolf population survey estimate from the Michigan Department of Natural Resources found a minimum of 762 wolves in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. This year’s estimate showed an increase of 131 animals compared to the 2022 estimate of 631; however, the results demonstrate a continued trend of statistical stability in Michigan ...
An analysis of data collected in 2022 produced an estimate of 631 wolves, give or take 49, the Department of Natural Resources said Tuesday. The survey estimated 136 packs roam the peninsula in Michigan’s far north, with an average of four to five animals in each.
Michigan at a glance. Gray wolves once existed throughout Michigan. However, removal began shortly after European settlement. Wolves were removed primarily through poisoning between 1838 and 1960.
ESCANABA, MI – Michigan’s federally protected gray wolves are under closer watch by state wildlife regulators than ever before. More than 1,200 wildlife cameras are strapped to trees across...
Michigan’s gray wolf population in the Upper Peninsula is estimated to be its highest in 12 years and may have reached its natural limit, the state’s Department of Natural Resources said in a...
Michigan has a stable population of gray wolves that fluctuates between six and seven hundred individuals, according to wildlife biologists. Michigan's wolf population remains stable at about 630 wolves, and there are no plans for a harvest season for wolves in the state.
Wolves are making a comeback at Isle Royale National Park in Michigan after nearly disappearing from the rugged island chain because of inbreeding and disease. The archipelago in northwestern...
The number of wolves in the Upper Peninsula reached its highest point in almost two decades this past winter, according to the Michigan Department of Natural Resources' latest survey, whose...
Wildlife experts have hit a dead end in their quest to determine how a gray wolf arrived in southern Michigan for the first time in more than 100 years. The wolf was killed in January by a hunter who told investigators that he had mistaken it for a coyote.
From Nature World News: The population of gray wolves in Michigan showed a good sign of a steady stability trend, according to the latest report and 2022 survey. The 2022 survey aimed to determine the population of gray wolves in Michigan. Click here for the full story.