The she-wolf, named Asha by schoolchildren, was captured near Taos,
New Mexico, on Sunday after heading further north than any other
Mexican wolf recorded since the species' 1998 reintroduction after
near extinction.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) said its policy was to
capture and transfer the wolves once they left a recovery area and
trekked north of I40, the interstate highway running through the
upper half of New Mexico.
Environmentalists said the wolves needed to enter historic habitats
north of I40 like the Grand Canyon and Southern Rockies for their
U.S. population to further recover from a current level of around
200 in the wild.
Ranchers have long complained the wolves eat their livestock and
endanger their livelihoods. The species' recovery has been hampered
by hundreds of illegal and legal killings, the Sierra Club says.
"The Fish and Wildlife Service has pledged, by regulation, to remove
all wolves north of Interstate 40, on behalf of the livestock
industry," said Michael Robinson, senior conservation advocate with
the Center for Biological Diversity.
The tagged wolf left her pack in late 2022 and was tracked north,
making it within 50 miles (81 km) of the Colorado border before
being apprehended from a helicopter.
"As it is breeding season and there are no other known wolves in the
area, there was a high likelihood of a negative interaction or
breeding with domestic dogs," USFWS said in a statement.
Asha will be held at a facility south of Albuquerque before being
paired with a male Mexican wolf and transferred as a pair to Mexico
later this year, USFWS said.
(Reporting By Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico; Editing by Sandra
Maler)
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