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The plan would likely result in 800 to 1,200 wolves in Wisconsin. The Natural Resources Board on Wednesday approved an updated wolf management plan. The plan would likely result in 800 to 1,200 ...
Wisconsin wildlife officials released a revised draft wolf management plan Tuesday that recommends holding the statewide population at around 1,000 animals, a concession to conservatives looking ...
Animal welfare advocates filed a lawsuit Wednesday seeking to invalidate Wisconsin's new wolf management plan, accusing state wildlife officials of violating the state's open meetings law and ...
The WDNR in 2022 conducted a social science survey of public attitudes toward wolves in Wisconsin as part of the update of the wolf management plan. [78] A draft plan was released in November 2022 for public comments. [79] The setting of a hard population limit was important for some legislators and members of the public. [80]
The Wisconsin gray wolf management plan wasn't the only controversial conservation topic on the agenda at the Oct. 25 Natural Resources Board meeting.
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The current system was implemented by a 1977 act of the Wisconsin Legislature (1977 Wisconsin Act 187), authorized by an April 1977 referendum to amend the state constitution. The act combined the pre-1978 County Courts with the pre-1978 Circuit Courts to create a single level of trial courts—the present Wisconsin Circuit Courts.
As described, mechanisms in the plan would keep the wolf population between about 800 and 1,200 animals. In 2023 Wisconsin had 1,007 wolves, according to the DNR estimate.