Ice forms along the muzzle of a Mexican Grey Wolf as he appears in his den at the Stone Zoo in Stoneham, Mass. Friday, Jan. 26, 2007. Temperatures were as low as single digits early in the day, with wind chills below zero. (AP Photo/Elise …
Ice forms along the muzzle of a Mexican Grey Wolf as he appears in his den at the Stone Zoo in Stoneham, Mass. Friday, Jan. 26, 2007. Temperatures were as low as single digits early in the day, with wind chills below zero. (AP Photo/Elise …
Updated: Friday, 20 Nov 2009, 5:34 PM MST
Published : Friday, 20 Nov 2009, 5:34 PM MST
ALBUQUERQUE (AP) - An environmental group is threatening to sue the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service over its failure to respond to a petition
involving the Mexican gray wolf.
The Center for Biological Diversity had filed a petition
asking the agency to list the wolf on the endangered species list
separate from other gray wolves in North America or as a distinct
population.
The group says wolf recovery in New Mexico and Arizona has
fallen off the tracks partly because of the legal limbo the animal
faces as a subspecies of the gray wolf.
The Mexican wolf was exterminated in the wild in the
Southwest by the 1930s. First listed as endangered as an individual
species in 1976, the Fish and Wildlife Service created a
species-wide designation for gray wolves in 1978.