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Group seeking changes to Mexican gray wolf reintroduction program

Group seeking changes to Mexican gray wolf reintroduction program

Compiled By The Daily Press

The Center for Biological Diversity is asking the federal government to change its Mexican gray wolf reintroduction program, according to a report by The Associated Press.

The environmental group officially petitioned the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Monday, the sixth anniversary of the first release of endangered wolves into the wild of southwestern New Mexico and southeastern Arizona.

The petition asks the agency to begin releasing wolves directly into the Gila National Forest. The programs current rules require the release of each wolf in Arizona and recapture before release in New Mexico.

The center also asks that the wolves be allowed to establish territories outside boundaries of the designated recovery area within the Gila and Apache-Sitgreaves national forests.

The final request in the petition is to require ranchers to remove or render unpalatable cattle and horse carcasses to prevent wolves from scavenging on them and getting used to eating livestock.

The center said it will file a lawsuit if the agency fails to make the changes within a year.

This petition starts the clock ticking to when Fish and Wildlife will have to act, said Michael Robinson of Silver City, a spokesman for the environmental group. With the population of radio-collared Mexican wolves in decline, and the entire wild population in trouble, were letting the feds know that if they dont protect these animals, well see them in court.

The three changes requested by the center were recommended in June 2001 by a panel of independent scientists who reviewed the program.

The New Mexico Game Commission has scheduled a public hearing regarding the wolf-recovery program from 3-7 p.m. Tuesday, April 6, at Light Hall at 1000 W. College Ave. in Silver City.

The commission has been opposed to wolf reintroduction. Environmentalists hope that will change, with the help of panel members appointed by Gov. Bill Richardson.

On the other side of the issue, members of groups like the New Mexico and Grant County Cattle Growers associations, and the Gila Forest Permittees Association, remain opposed to wolf releases in the state because of the effect on ranching interests.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service began releasing the animals in March 1998 in an effort to re-establish a wild population of about 100 wolves in southwestern New Mexico and southeastern Arizona after the species was hunted to the brink of extinction in the early 1900s.

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