Watch California’s Newest Wolf Pack Howling in the Wilderness

Wildlife officials in California were shocked when they discovered a brand-new wolf pack living in Tulare County in 2023. Just a month after they received a name with native roots—the Yowlumni Pack—the California Department of Fish and Wildlife has released video of the wolves howling in the wilderness.

Wildlife officials confirmed reports of wolves in the southern Sierra in August 2023, more than 200 miles away from the closest known pack in the northern part of the state. The discovery signified a significant development in the state’s wildlife landscape.

The CDFW released this video in January 2024 showing wolves in the wild:

The sudden appearance of this pack has stirred tensions among Central Valley livestock owners and those overseeing ongoing fire recovery projects around Sequoia National Forest and Giant Sequoia National Monument, areas recently ravaged by wildfires.

Concerns have become more heated as the environmental assessments for these projects did not account for the impact of chainsaw-wielding crews, bulldozers, and trucks on endangered gray wolves and their habitat. Environmentalists emphasize that wolves play a vital role in restoring the balance of ecosystems, benefitting various animal and plant species that co-evolved with them.

A group of environmentalists recently sent a letter to the U.S. Forest Service that urged them to suspend logging operations in the are until they can “determine whether any activities associated with those and other projects could adversely affect the wolves.”

“Wolves rewild the landscape and that’s good not just for the wolves but for entire ecosystems,” said Amaroq Weiss, senior wolf advocate for the Center for Biological Diversity.

The Lassen Pack played a crucial role in wolf reintroduction into California

The presence of wolves also triggers worries among ranchers due to livestock predation. Ranchers are calling for state wildlife officials to collar some wolves within the pack to gain insights into their behavior and thus aid in protecting both livestock and wolves.

“We believe it will be important for state wildlife officials to put a radio collar on one or more wolves in that pack to better understand how they are behaving,” said Kirk Wilbur, vice president of government affairs at the California Cattlemen’s Association, to the LA Times.

“We fully realize how risky and difficult that will be, but we need wolf data to help protect livestock, as well as wolves,” he said.

Despite the excitement over the wolf pack’s discovery, wildlife authorities are cautious about revealing specific locations, fearing that this might lead hunters to track and kill them.

The dynamics between wolf conservation and livestock protection present a complex challenge, with advocates and ranchers seeking ways to coexist while ensuring ecological balance. The gray wolf is classified as a state endangered species in California and is protected under stringent regulations.
But that hasn’t stopped wolves from being killed in the state, including the mysterious disappearance of the Shasta Pack in 2018.

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