
Tell Wyoming officials: Don’t condemn 44 wolves to death
The Wyoming Game and Fish Department is advancing plans to let hunters kill 44 wolves.
Take Action
The Wyoming Game and Fish Department is advancing plans to let hunters kill 44 wolves across the state.
But there’s hope for these 44 wolves: Right now, Wyoming is accepting comments on its plan, so you can help save these wolves from slaughter.
Before the June 10 deadline, will you join us in speaking up to protect these wolves?
Maybe a hunter would pick off a mama wolf. Leaving her den to find food for her pups, the mother would be singled out and shot — and her pups would be left hungry, alone, and afraid.
Or, maybe we’d lose the pack leader from the small but mighty Porcupine Creek Pack. The hunter would take the leader’s body as a “trophy,” and the wolf’s little brother would be left howling an unanswerable question: “Where did you go, brother?”
With just 163 wolves left in the area around Yellowstone, letting hunters kill 44 of these wolves would tear too many more packs apart.
In 85% of Wyoming, hunters can kill as many wolves as they’d like. What happens when these killings creep into the protected lands around Yellowstone?
More hunting in Wyoming means more horrible deaths for wolves like Theia, who was run down, duct taped, paraded around a bar, and shot out back.
Hunts have even wiped out entire packs. The Dog Creek Pack, for example, was wiped out in just one day when a hunter killed every single wolf in the pack.
Now is our best chance to convince Wyoming officials to save 44 vulnerable wolves. Speak up to help save Wyoming wolves before the June 10 deadline.
Deadline approaching: Help save these 44 wolves from slaughter
Take Action