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Goal: 50,000 Progress: 6,401
Sponsored by: Defenders of Wildlife Action Fund

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is proposing to remove all endangered species act (ESA) protections for most of the gray wolves across the United States. This would be a conservation nightmare.

Delisting would prematurely turn wolf management over to the states, and we've already seen what can happen when rabid anti-wolf politics are allowed to trump science and core wildlife management principles.

More than 1,100 wolves have already been killed in the Northern Rockies since Congress took ESA protections away from them in 2011.

Please send an urgent message to Secretary of Interior Sally Jewell — demand that wolves retain the federal protection they need to ensure their recovery in the wild.

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Dear Secretary Jewell,

I'm writing to you today to demand that the federal government not prematurely strip Endangered Species Act protections from most gray wolves in the United States.

The restoration of wolves has been hailed as one of the biggest successes of the Endangered Species Act since it was passed in 1973. But the important work of wolf recovery is unfinished. Delisting the gray wolf will halt four decades of progress in its tracks and expose America's wolves to unwarranted and unsustainable killing.

This is precisely what has happened in Wyoming, Idaho and Montana, where the premature delisting of those states' wolf populations has led to the killing of more than 1,100 wolves. This race to the bottom in wolf management threatens to seriously undermine wolves' hard-won climb from the brink of extinction.

Delisting could also derail efforts to restore wolves to more of their historic range that has huge areas of suitable wolf habitat, including Colorado, the Pacific Northwest, Utah and California.

Wolves are an iconic, native species that play a vital role in restoring healthy ecosystems by keeping prey species in balance. Places like the Olympic peninsula and the Colorado Rockies could benefit both ecologically and economically from the return of wolves.

Delisting would close the door on an historic opportunity to revitalize some of America's best remaining wildlife habitat by bringing back these important animals.

Someday, when wolves have recovered throughout most of their historic range, and when states refrain from managing their wolf populations in a politically driven race to the bottom then perhaps delisting is an option worth debating. However, we are far from that day, and delisting now would be an avoidable conservation nightmare.

We urge you in the strongest possible terms to not turn the clock back on one of America's signature wildlife conservation success stories. The future of full wolf recovery is in your hands.

Thank you.

Petition Signatures


May 15, 2013 Nicole Lebel
May 15, 2013 Ashley Trigg
May 15, 2013 lisa davis
May 15, 2013 Eileen Goodman
May 15, 2013 Anthony Tench
May 15, 2013 ollivier marie-france
May 15, 2013 (Name not displayed) leave these animals alone - they are dropping in #s every year and will become extinct if you continue in yr stupidity and want them eliminated - find something better to do with time/money
May 15, 2013 Jane Veal
May 15, 2013 Christine Field
May 15, 2013 Dixie Rice Wolves are beautiful animals they need to protected because we are taking over their land.
May 15, 2013 Linda lima
May 15, 2013 Stephanie Gray
May 15, 2013 cathy ribeiro
May 15, 2013 damiria machado
May 15, 2013 Víctor Carrasco Bravo Help Them
May 15, 2013 Martha Autry
May 15, 2013 stefaniya kostiuk
May 15, 2013 Danna Williams
May 15, 2013 alison kennedy
May 15, 2013 Susan Carter
May 15, 2013 Valerie Smith
May 15, 2013 michele murphy
May 15, 2013 Joanna Ireland Dear Secretary Sally Jewell, As wolfs retain the federal protection, they need to ensure their recovery in the wild. Had not been enough wolfs killed?
May 15, 2013 Janette Chapman
May 15, 2013 Katherin Mackwen
May 15, 2013 Abby Rodriguez Please do not take wolves off of the endangered list. They are part of our wildlife that is slowly being killed away even though they have been here long before we were.
May 15, 2013 (Name not displayed)
May 15, 2013 M. Gannett
May 15, 2013 Ellis Klein
May 15, 2013 Sandra Kellard
May 15, 2013 Brigitte Bonnet
May 15, 2013 Sam Antha
May 15, 2013 shirley carter
May 15, 2013 Sheila Strassburg Please know I am deeply saddened by the thought of wolfs being taken off the endangered Species list! It's is unthinkable... they are a native species of the west and important in the balance of life!!!!!!!!!
May 15, 2013 steven pezzeca
May 15, 2013 Stephanie Pecchio
May 15, 2013 Kara Lewis Please leave the wolves on the Endangered list. The hunters have enough animals to kil.l
May 15, 2013 Vicki Carbone As apex predictors, wolves are necessary for the health of the ecosystem. As glorious representations of a past, wolves are necessary for our hearts. They must be saved.
May 15, 2013 cathy vance
May 15, 2013 janet forman
May 15, 2013 ilene brandt
May 15, 2013 AnneMarie Ansel
May 15, 2013 (Name not displayed) Humans can learn a lot from wolves and their family structure. Please do not let wolves become history
May 15, 2013 Linda Reeves
May 15, 2013 Alicia Stockburger
May 15, 2013 (Name not displayed)
May 15, 2013 Christine Harris Please keep the success of the Endangered Species Act as it was intended. Wolves are endangered and needed in their ecosystem.
May 15, 2013 (Name not displayed) Please use wisdom and keep the Gray Wolf under protection. We don't want to lose what progress has been made.
May 15, 2013 monika pellegrini
May 15, 2013 (Name not displayed)

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