The Gray Wolf and the
Endangered Species Act (ESA):
A Brief Legal History

Kristina Alexander
Legislative Attorney
July 27, 2011
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R41730
CRS Report for Congress
Pr
epared for Members and Committees of Congress

The Gray Wolf and the Endangered Species Act (ESA): A Brief Legal History

Summary
Wolves had all but disappeared from the contiguous United States when Congress enacted the
Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA), and the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) listed wolves as
an endangered species in most of the lower 48 states. Since then, the gray wolf (Canis lupus) has
held every status of protection under the ESA, as regulatory efforts have shifted from conserving
the wolf, which culminated in reintroducing wolves into three parts of the American West in the
1990s, to reducing wolf protections where its population has surged. Litigation has followed each
regulatory change. After courts rejected regulatory efforts to reduce protections, Congress enacted
P.L. 112-10, Section 1713, which removes federal protection of the gray wolf in Montana, Idaho,
eastern Washington, eastern Oregon, and north-central Utah, and marks the first legislative
delisting in the history of the ESA.
Other changes to wolf protection are contemplated. FWS has proposed recognizing a new species
of wolf, the eastern wolf (Canis lycaon), and changing the gray wolf’s historic range to omit all
or parts of 29 states in the eastern United States. Additionally, FWS has proposed delisting gray
wolves in the Western Great Lakes area and evaluating whether wolf populations in the Pacific
Northwest and the Southwest are appropriately protected under the ESA. Pending legislation
would shift gray wolf management to the states (H.R. 1819 and H.R. 2584, § 119), or would
eliminate ESA protections for gray wolves (H.R. 838, H.R. 509, and S. 249).
This report provides a brief history of the laws, regulations, and lawsuits related to the wolf’s
protected status. Fuller analyses of the concepts discussed in this report can be found in the
companion report, CRS Report RL34238, Gray Wolves Under the Endangered Species Act (ESA):
Distinct Population Segments and Experimental Populations
, by Kristina Alexander and M.
Lynne Corn.

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The Gray Wolf and the Endangered Species Act (ESA): A Brief Legal History

Contents
Background...................................................................................................................................... 1
Listing History of the Gray Wolf ..................................................................................................... 1
Gray Wolf Experimental Populations .............................................................................................. 2
Gray Wolf Distinct Population Segments ........................................................................................ 4
2003 Western, Eastern, and Southwestern DPSs....................................................................... 4
2007 Western Great Lakes DPS and 2008 Northern Rocky Mountain DPS ............................. 5
2009 Western Great Lakes and Northern Rocky Mountain DPSs............................................. 7
Conditional Settlement Agreement............................................................................................ 8
Gray Wolf Legislation...................................................................................................................... 8
Proposed Rulemaking: Redefining Populations, Species, and Range ........................................... 10

Figures
Figure 1. Gray Wolf Protection Pursuant to 1978 ESA Listing ....................................................... 2
Figure 2. Gray Wolf Protection after Reintroduction of Mexican Gray Wolf.................................. 3
Figure 3. Gray Wolf Protection after 2003 DPS Designations ........................................................ 5
Figure 4. Gray Wolf Protection after 2007-2008 DPS Designations ............................................... 6
Figure 5. Gray Wolf Protection after 2009 DPS Designations ........................................................ 7
Figure 6. Gray Wolf Protection after P.L. 112-10 ............................................................................ 9
Figure 7. Gray Wolf Protection Proposed by 76 Fed. Reg. 26086................................................. 11

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 11
Acknowledgments ......................................................................................................................... 11

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The Gray Wolf and the Endangered Species Act (ESA): A Brief Legal History

Background
At the time of its 1978 listing under the Endangered Species Act (ESA or the Act), the wolf was
nearly extirpated from all of the lower 48 states except Minnesota. Since then, the population of
the gray wolf has grown, prompting many to argue that protection is no longer necessary. The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) reports 1,651 wolves in the Northern Rocky Mountains as
of December 31, 2010;1 approximately 4,269 wolves in the Western Great Lakes area as of
December 10, 2010;2 and 50 wolves in the Southwest as of January 2011.3 As the gray wolf’s
population has changed, so has its ESA protection. It has been classified as endangered,
threatened, experimental, and even delisted, meaning that it is no longer protected under the ESA.
The history of the gray wolf’s recovery (and whether it actually has recovered) is marked by
conflict, with each regulatory change bringing litigation. In 2011, Congress enacted legislation
which directed FWS to delist wolves in the Northern Rocky Mountains.4
Listing History of the Gray Wolf
Before the gray wolf was protected as a species under the ESA, the Eastern Timber wolf,5 the
Northern Rocky Mountain gray wolf, and the Mexican wolf subspecies were protected. In 1978,
protection of the wolf at the subspecies level ended. Instead, FWS listed the gray wolf species
(Canis lupus) as endangered throughout the lower 48 states except Minnesota, where, because of
its larger population, FWS classified it as threatened.6 Thus, in 1978, gray wolf protection was as
depicted in Figure 1.

1 Rocky Mountain Wolf Recovery 2010 Interagency Annual Report Summary and Background, available at
http://www.fws.gov/mountain-prairie/species/mammals/wolf/annualrpt10/index.html.
2 FWS Midwest Region Press Release, Status of Wolves in the Western Great Lakes Under the Endangered Species Act
(December 10, 2010), available at http://www.fws.gov/midwest/News/release.cfm?rid=320.
3 FWS Southwest Region Press Release, 2009 Mexican Wolf Population Survey Complete (February 5, 2010), available
at http://www.fws.gov/southwest/docs/WolffinalPopCount2009NewsReleaseFeb52010.pdf.
4 P.L. 112-10, § 1713.
5 FWS proposed recognizing the eastern wolf (Canis lycaon) as a different species from the gray wolf (Canis lupus). 76
Fed. Reg. 25590 (May 5, 2011).
6 43 Fed. Reg. 9607 (March 9, 1978). Endangered is defined as being in danger of extinction throughout all or a
significant portion of its range. 16 U.S.C. §1532(6). Threatened is defined as likely to become endangered within the
foreseeable future. 16 U.S.C. §1532(20).
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The Gray Wolf and the Endangered Species Act (ESA): A Brief Legal History

Figure 1. Gray Wolf Protection Pursuant to 1978 ESA Listing

Source: Congressional Research Service.
Gray Wolf Experimental Populations
In 1982, Congress amended the ESA to allow experimental populations (Ex Pops) of endangered
or threatened species to be reintroduced into their former habitats.7 In the case of the gray wolf,
FWS planned to locate three Ex Pops in Central Idaho, Yellowstone, and the Blue Range of
Arizona and New Mexico. All were deemed nonessential Ex Pops, meaning that they would be
treated as threatened species under most circumstances.8 Under the ESA, a threatened species
may not be killed or harmed unless it is subject to special rules that allow taking.9 FWS issued
such rules for the gray wolf Ex Pops, detailing when a wolf might be killed. FWS could not have
issued Special Rules if it had determined the wolves were essential and endangered.
Reintroduction has been controversial from the time Congress authorized it. For example, a rider
to the Appropriations Act for 1992 banned spending any money to release wolves into
Yellowstone and Central Idaho for that fiscal year.10 Eventually, 66 wolves were released into
Central Idaho and Yellowstone in 1995 and 1996,11 while the Mexican gray wolf was

7 P.L. 97-304 §6(6), 96 Stat. 1424; 16 U.S.C. §1539(j).
8 16 U.S.C. §1539(j)(2)(C).
9 16 U.S.C. § 1533(d). Special Rules provide customized protection that FWS deems necessary and advisable for the
species’ conservation. The ESA prohibits taking an endangered species. 16 U.S.C. §1538(a)(1)(B). Taking is defined as
“harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, trap, capture, or collect, or to attempt to engage in any such conduct.” 16
U.S.C. §1532(19).
10 P.L. 102-154; 105 Stat. 993.
11 59 Fed. Reg. 60266 (November 22, 1994) (Central Idaho); 59 Fed. Reg. 60252 (November 22, 1994) (Yellowstone).
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The Gray Wolf and the Endangered Species Act (ESA): A Brief Legal History

reintroduced to the Blue Range beginning in 1998.12 Lawsuits were filed challenging the
reintroduction, but courts upheld the wolf Ex Pop program in each case.13
Following the reintroduction of the Mexican gray wolf, gray wolf protection was as depicted in
Figure 2.
Figure 2. Gray Wolf Protection after Reintroduction of Mexican Gray Wolf
(Valid until May 5, 2011, except during times when FWS designated Distinct Population Segments (DPSs))

Source: Congressional Research Service based on information from 59 Fed. Reg. 60266 (November 22, 1994)
(Yellowstone); 59 Fed. Reg. 60281 (November 22, 1994) (Central Idaho); and 63 Fed. Reg. 1766 (January 12,
1998) (Blue Range).
The Central Idaho and Yellowstone wolves flourished. Their population was 1,651 in 2010,14
which was a slight drop from their 2009 population of 1,706.15 The Mexican gray wolf population
has not been so successful. In January 2011, the population totaled 50, which was nearly a 20%
increase from 2010,16 but still less than the peak population of 59 in 2006.17

12 63 Fed. Reg. 1752 (January 12, 1998).
13 United States v. McKittrick, 142 F.3d 1170 (9th Cir. 1998) (upholding Ex Pop wolf reintroduction program);
Wyoming Farm Bureau Federation v. Babbitt, 199 F.3d 1224 (10th Cir. 2000) (upholding Ex Pop wolf reintroduction
program); New Mexico Cattle Growers v. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 1999 WL 34797509 (D.N.M. 1999)
(upholding reintroduction of Ex Pop wolves to New Mexico and Arizona); Defenders of Wildlife v. Lujan, 792 F.
Supp. 834 (D.D.C. 1992) (suit to force reintroduction of wolf into Yellowstone as planned was ruled moot due to
Appropriations Act).
14 Rocky Mountain Wolf Recovery 2010 Interagency Annual Report, available at http://www.fws.gov/mountain-
prairie/species/mammals/wolf.
15 FWS Memorandum, Service review of the 2009 wolf population in the NRM DPS [Northern Rocky Mountain
Distinct Population Segment] (April 26, 2010), available at http://www.fws.gov/mountain-prairie/species/mammals/
wolf/post-delisting-wolf-monitoring/doc20100428072425.pdf.
16 FWS, Blue Range Wolf Reintroduction Area Monthly Project Updates, available at http://www.fws.gov/southwest/
(continued...)
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The Gray Wolf and the Endangered Species Act (ESA): A Brief Legal History

The number of wolves in the Northwest led to Congress requiring certain wolf populations to be
delisted. In 2011, FWS delisted wolves in Montana, Idaho, eastern Washington, eastern Oregon,
and north-central Utah in compliance with P.L. 112-10, Section 1713,18 although Wyoming
wolves kept their Ex Pop status. The Wyoming wolves could become classified as endangered if
the federal District Court of Montana finds they do not meet the statutory definition of an Ex Pop
because they are no longer geographically isolated from other wolves.19
Gray Wolf Distinct Population Segments
In 1978, Congress revised the definition of species by introducing the term distinct population
segment (DPS),20 which describes a population of a listed vertebrate species that is genetically
distinct and has a separate range.21 Prior to this change, the ESA allowed species, subspecies, and
groups of “smaller taxa” to be listed.22
2003 Western, Eastern, and Southwestern DPSs
An April 2003 rule designating three gray wolf DPSs, Western, Eastern, and Southwestern, was
FWS’s first regulatory initiative to decrease ESA protection of the gray wolf.23 Under the rule,
FWS downlisted Western and Eastern DPSs from endangered to threatened and delisted gray
wolves in the Southeast. FWS listed the Southwestern DPS as endangered pursuant to the rule,
and retained the three Ex Pops in central Idaho, Yellowstone, and Blue Range.

(...continued)
es/mexicanwolf/BRWRP_notes.cfm.
17 FWS Mexican Wolf Recovery Program, Annual Progress Reports 2001 through 2008, available at
http://www.fws.gov/southwest/es/mexicanwolf/documents.shtml.
18 76 Fed. Reg. 25590 (May 5, 2012).
19 Defenders of Wildlife v. Gould, CV-08-14 (D. Mont. January 28, 2011) (Order to show Cause). FWS has moved to
dismiss this case as mooted by P.L. 112-10 and the reissuance of the April 2009 DPS rule.
16 U.S.C. §1539(j)(1): “the term ‘experimental population’ means any population (including any offspring arising
solely therefrom) authorized by the Secretary for release ... but only when, and at such times as, the population is
wholly separate geographically from nonexperimental populations of the same species.”
20 P.L. 95-632, § 2, 92 Stat. 3752. See 16 U.S.C. §1532(16) for the current definition of species.
21 See 61 Fed. Reg. 4722 (February 7, 1996) for the FWS DPS Policy.
22 P.L. 93-205, §3(11), 87 Stat. 886.
23 68 Fed. Reg. 15803 (April 1, 2003).
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The Gray Wolf and the Endangered Species Act (ESA): A Brief Legal History

Following that 2003 rulemaking, the map of gray wolf protection was as depicted in Figure 3.
Figure 3. Gray Wolf Protection after 2003 DPS Designations
(Valid until 2005 court decisions)

Source: Congressional Research Service based on information from 68 Fed. Reg. 15862 (April 1, 2003).
In 2005, two different courts held that the 2003 rule violated the ESA, primarily by the way it
calculated the range of the wolf, and both courts vacated the rule.24 As a result, the wolf regained
the ESA protections that existed in 1998 as shown in Figure 2.
2007 Western Great Lakes DPS and 2008 Northern Rocky Mountain
DPS

On February 8, 2007, FWS designated and delisted a Western Great Lakes gray wolf DPS.25
Additionally, on that same day, FWS proposed designating and delisting a Northern Rocky
Mountain DPS, if Wyoming revised its state management plan.26 If Wyoming failed to do so,
significant portions of Wyoming would remain protected Ex Pop areas. In the February 2008 final
rule, FWS designated a DPS consisting of the eastern third of Washington and Oregon, a small
part of north-central Utah, and all of Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming.27 The Ex Pops in the

24 Defenders of Wildlife v. U.S. Dept. of the Interior, 354 F. Supp. 2d 1156, 1172 (D. Or. 2005) (“FWS downlisted the
entire Eastern and Western DPSs without analyzing the threats to the graywolf [sic] outside of the core areas, as
required”); National Wildlife Federation v. Norton, 386 F. Supp. 2d 553, 564 (D. Vt. 2005) (“FWS appears to be
classifying the graywolf [sic] based upon geography, not biology”).
25 72 Fed. Reg. 6052 (February 8, 2007).
26 72 Fed. Reg. 6106 (February 8, 2007).
27 73 Fed. Reg. 10514 (February 27, 2008).
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The Gray Wolf and the Endangered Species Act (ESA): A Brief Legal History

Northern Rocky Mountain area were effectively reclassified as a DPS by the rule. Wolves not in a
DPS or an Ex Pop remained endangered. At that point, gray wolf protection was as depicted in
Figure 4.
Figure 4. Gray Wolf Protection after 2007-2008 DPS Designations
(Valid until 2008 court decisions)

Source: Congressional Research Service based on 2008 data from FWS and Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks.
Notes: The data for this map are from 2008, and not based on the information published in the FWS DPS
notices (72 Fed. Reg. 6058; 73 Fed. Reg. 10517), which is from 2006.
Courts rejected both DPSs. The District Court of Montana issued a preliminary injunction halting
the delisting in July 2008.28 The court held that there was no showing that the genetic interchange
among wolf packs in the area was stable enough to support delisting. Without adequate gene flow,
the court noted, wolves could become inbred and perhaps endangered once more. The District
Court of the District of Columbia vacated the Western Great Lakes DPS designation and the
delisting rule in September 2008, holding that because the DPS program was created to enhance
protection, FWS’s use of it to delist may be contrary to the ESA.29 In light of court orders, FWS
withdrew the rules, and the wolf protection shown in Figure 2 was reinstated.30

28 Defenders of Wildlife v. Hall, 565 F. Supp. 2d 1160 (D. Mont. 2008).
29 Humane Society of the United States v. Kempthorne, 579 F. Supp. 2d 7 (D.D.C. 2008).
30 73 Fed. Reg. 75356 (December 11, 2008).
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The Gray Wolf and the Endangered Species Act (ESA): A Brief Legal History

2009 Western Great Lakes and Northern Rocky Mountain DPSs
On April 2, 2009, FWS again designated and delisted DPSs in the Western Great Lakes31 and the
Northern Rocky Mountains.32 The boundaries of these DPSs were the same as in the 2007 and
2008 rules, except that while Wyoming was part of the Northern Rocky Mountain DPS, its
wolves were not delisted. The wolves in Wyoming kept their Ex Pop status, although the rest of
the Ex Pop in the Northern Rocky Mountains was extinguished by the April 2009 rule. Wolves
outside of Ex Pop or DPS boundaries remained listed as endangered. Following the April 2009
rules, wolf protection was as depicted in Figure 5.
Figure 5. Gray Wolf Protection after 2009 DPS Designations
(Valid until 2009 settlement of Western Great Lakes DPS lawsuit
and 2010 decision regarding Northern Rocky Mountain DPS)

Source: Congressional Research Service based on 2009 data from FWS and Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks.
Once again, FWS withdrew the rules following lawsuits. The Montana District Court held that
delisting all but the Wyoming wolves in the Northern Rocky Mountain DPS violated the ESA
because the Act did not allow listing or delisting a subgroup of a DPS.33 After the Humane
Society of the United States filed suit challenging the Western Great Lakes DPS, the parties
settled.34 Ultimately, FWS withdrew both rules separately,35 and wolves returned to the
protections that existed in 1998, as shown in Figure 2.

31 74 Fed. Reg. 15069 (April 2, 2009).
32 74 Fed. Reg. 15123 (April 2, 2009).
33 Defenders of Wildlife v. Salazar, 729 F. Supp. 2d 1207 (D. Mont. 2010).
34 Humane Society of the United States v. Salazar, Civ. No. 09-1092 (D.D.C. July 2, 2009).
35 74 Fed. Reg. 47483 (September 16, 2009) (Western Great Lakes); 75 Fed. Reg. 65574 (October 26, 2010) (Northern
(continued...)
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The Gray Wolf and the Endangered Species Act (ESA): A Brief Legal History

Subsequent litigation between the state of Wyoming and FWS led to a reexamination of
Wyoming’s management plan. In November 2010, the District Court of Wyoming ordered FWS
to reconsider whether Wyoming’s wolf management plan would meet recovery goals for the
species to enable the state to assume management authority over its wolves.36
Conditional Settlement Agreement
In March 2011, FWS entered a conditional settlement agreement with most of the plaintiffs that
had challenged the 2009 Northern Rocky Mountain DPS rule. The agreement would have delisted
wolves in Montana and Idaho provided the August 2010 decision vacating the April 2009 rule
were partially withdrawn. The settling plaintiffs moved the District Court of Montana to reinstate
the 2009 DPS rule as it applied to Montana and Idaho until FWS could issue a new rule.
However, the court rejected the motion, effectively ending the settlement.37 The court held that it
lacked authority under the ESA to reinstate part of the 2009 rule because it would lead to killing
protected wolves.
Gray Wolf Legislation
In 2011, Congress enacted the first law directing FWS to delist a species. Pursuant to the Full-
Year Appropriations Act of 2011, P.L. 112-10, Section 1713, Congress required FWS to reissue
the April 2009 Northern Rocky Mountain DPS rule, which delisted the gray wolf in Montana,
Idaho, eastern Washington, eastern Oregon, and north-central Utah. Wolves in the rest of the
lower 48 states remained federally protected as either threatened or endangered. P.L. 112-10 bars
judicial review of the reissued rule, but still allows subsequent FWS regulatory action, such as
delisting in Wyoming, or relisting of the DPS, should the wolf’s status change. FWS reissued the
April 2009 Northern Rocky Mountain DPS rule on May 5, 2011.
Enactment of P.L. 112-10, Section 1713 was significant because legislation to delist species rarely
had been proposed and never had been successful.38 Some have argued that the law is a tipping
point in species protection, and that politics and not science will dictate species protection in the
future. However, Section 1713 is not a blanket delisting, but a direction to re-release a rule in
which FWS determined that the best available science supported delisting those wolves. As
referenced above, however, a federal court had found that FWS had violated the ESA in making
this determination.

(...continued)
Rocky Mountains).
36 Wyoming v. U.S. Department of the Interior, No. 09-CV-118J, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 122829 (D. Wyo. November
18, 2010).
37 Defenders of Wildlife v. Salazar, 09-cv-77-DWM (D. Mont. April 9, 2011).
38 All examples were from the 100th Congress and were proposed amendments to the Endangered Species Act
Amendments of 1987. They were not passed. See 133 Cong. Rec. H11248 (Concho water snake); 133 Cong. Rec.
H11248 (gray wolf); and 133 Cong. Rec. H11617 (leopard darter minnow).
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The Gray Wolf and the Endangered Species Act (ESA): A Brief Legal History

Wolf protection following reissuance of the April 2009 rule is as depicted in Figure 6.
Figure 6. Gray Wolf Protection after P.L. 112-10

Source: Congressional Research Service, based in part on 2009 data from FWS and Montana Fish, Wildlife and
Parks.
Other bills before the 112th Congress also would restrict federal protection of the gray wolf. Those
addressing the wolves of the West may not advance in light of P.L. 112-10. For example,
Congress apparently chose P.L. 112-10, Section 1713 over the nearly identical S. 321 (Baucus),
which would have given the 2009 rule the force of law rather than regulation. Additionally, H.R.
510 (Rehberg), which allows state regulation of wolves in Idaho and Montana, appears mooted by
P.L. 112-10.
Other bills do not appear moot. For example, H.R. 838 (Kline) would eliminate federal protection
of wolves in the Western Great Lakes area, proposing: “Any wolf in Minnesota, Wisconsin, or
Michigan shall not be treated under any status of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C.
1531 et seq.), including as an endangered species, a threatened species, an essential experimental
population, or a nonessential experimental population.”39 H.R. 509 (Rehberg) and S. 249 (Hatch)
would amend the ESA so it would not apply to the gray wolf. Those two bills would affect all
gray wolves, including the populations in the Southwest as well as the Western Great Lakes and
Northern Rocky Mountain areas.
After the delisting directed by P.L. 112-10 went into effect, Representative Candice S. Miller
introduced H.R. 1819 which would give states management authority over wolves provided that

39 This language appears to mean that Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan wolves shall not be treated as protected
under
or covered by the ESA, but those italicized words are not in the bill. It is not clear how H.R. 838 would affect
existing federal protection because of this wording.
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The Gray Wolf and the Endangered Species Act (ESA): A Brief Legal History

specified population levels were maintained. H.R. 1819 addresses all three gray wolf40 population
centers, the Northern Rockies, the Western Great Lakes, and the Southwest. In each case, if the
numbers of wolves dip below a statutorily protected amount, the Secretary of the Interior would
be authorized to treat wolves as protected for at least two years after reestablishing the targeted
number of wolves. Under H.R. 1819, population goals would not be based on breeding pairs but
on individuals. This criterion is not as clearly related to adequate genetic diversity and
reproductive capacity, and might arguably be more difficult to measure than the number of
breeding pairs.41
Also, the Department of the Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act for
FY2012 (H.R. 2584) includes a provision that would eliminate judicial review of certain gray
wolf delistings. If gray wolves in Wyoming or the Western Great Lakes are delisted, Section 119
of that bill would block judicial review of the delisting rule, provided that the Secretary of the
Interior has authorized the state to manage its gray wolves.
Proposed Rulemaking: Redefining Populations,
Species, and Range

On May 5, 2011, FWS proposed additional changes to gray wolf protection.42 These changes are
designating a Western Great Lakes DPS and delisting it; revising the gray wolf’s historic range by
eliminating parts or all of 29 eastern states from that range; initiating a five-year review for the
gray wolf; initiating a status review of the gray wolf in the Pacific Northwest; initiating a status
review of the Mexican wolf in the Southwest and Mexico; and recognizing a new species of wolf,
the eastern wolf (Canis lycaon).43 Some of these actions seem likely to lead to further
differentiated protection of wolves depending on population location. If the May 2011 proposals
are adopted, gray wolf protection could resemble that of the 2003 DPS rules (see Figure 3).

40 The bill defines gray wolf to include Canus [sic] lycaon, and Canus [sic] lupus baileyi (the Mexican wolf).
41 Lone wolves are often secretive and hide to avoid attack by resident packs.
42 76 Fed. Reg. 26086 (May 5, 2011).
43 76 Fed. Reg. 26086 (May 5, 2011).
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The Gray Wolf and the Endangered Species Act (ESA): A Brief Legal History

As proposed by FWS’s May 2011 notice of rulemaking, gray wolf protection would be as
depicted in Figure 7.
Figure 7. Gray Wolf Protection Proposed by 76 Fed. Reg. 26086

Source: Congressional Research Service, compiled from 76 Fed. Reg. 26086, and other map sources listed
above.

Author Contact Information

Kristina Alexander

Legislative Attorney
kalexander@crs.loc.gov, 7-8597

Acknowledgments
The author would like to thank Pat McClaughry, Senior Graphics Specialist at CRS, and Kimberly Guess,
of the Research Data Section at CRS, for creating the maps in this report.

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