FWS also emphasized that wolves exist in distinct regional populations and argued that a single national recovery plan is not biologically meaningful for how the ESA is designed to work.
This builds on a finding where FWS stated that “the gray wolf in the Western United States is not in danger of extinction or likely to become so in the foreseeable future.”
But a federal judge in Montana ordered the agency to revisit environmental groups’ petition, ruling that FWS had not fully addressed certain threats, including state-level hunting policy changes.
Meanwhile, a new bill called H.R. 845, the Pet and Livestock Protection Act, sits in Congress. The bill would reinstate the 2020 delisting of wolves nationwide and, critically, states that the delisting “shall not be subject to judicial review.” The intent is to halt the cycle of lawsuits that has repeatedly overturned FWS decisions.
As litigation and politics continue to collide, the lack of a national recovery plan signals a shift in federal posture. Wolf management may increasingly default to states and tribes, leaving the species’ future to a patchwork of regional policies rather than a single federal roadmap.