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Wolves in Montana
Wolf Population Map
Montana Wolf Distribution
Wolf packs occur primarily in western Montana, but wolves could be found anywhere in Montana.
Wolves are great travelers and are known to disperse up to 500 miles.
The average wolf pack territory in Montana is about 200 square miles. Many are larger.
Most packs in Montana are found on private property at one time or another.
Wolves are still classified under the Endangered Species Act as “endangered” across northern Montana and as “experimental, non-essential across southern Montana.
Montana Wolf Population
Wolf Population Chart
Wolves first began colonizing northwest Montana near Glacier National Park in the early 1980s.
Wolves were reintroduced into Yellowstone National Park and the central Idaho wilderness in 1995 and 1996.
Since then, the Montana population has increased through natural reproduction and dispersal into new areas.
The average wolf pack in Montana has 4 to 7 animals.
The population estimate is based on visual counts of packs in December.
Wolves in the Northern Rockies
Wolf Distribution
Wolf Distribution Map
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service designated 3 separate wolf recovery areas in the northern Rockies: northwest Montana, Central Idaho, and the Greater Yellowstone area.
The State of Montana contains portions of all three federal recovery areas.
The northwest Montana recovery area was naturally recolonized by wolves crossing the international border from Canada. Wolves in this area are classified as endangered under the Endangered Species Act.
Wolves were reintroduced into the Central Idaho and Greater Yellowstone recovery areas in 1995 and 1996. Wolves in this area are classified as experimental, non-essential under the Endangered Species Act.
Biologists have documented wolf dispersal between and among all three recovery areas.
Northern Rockies Wolf Population by Recovery Area
Wolf Population Chart
At the end of 2007, the estimated minimum number of wolves in the northern Rocky Mountain States of Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming was 1,513 wolves.
In the northern Rockies, the total number of estimated breeding pairs (an adult male and an adult female and at least two pups) at the end of 2007 was 107.
Northern Rockies Wolf Population by State Boundary
Wolf Population Chart
At the end of 2007, the State of Montana had an esitmated minimum of 422 wolves; Idaho had an estimated minimum of 732, and Wyoming had an estimated 359.
At the end of 2007, Montana had an estimated 39 breeding pairs (an adult male and an adult female and at least two pups on Dec. 31). Idaho had an estimated 43 breeding pairs and Wyoming had 25 breeding pairs.
Most of the wolves inside Yellowstone National Park are tallied in Wyoming counts.
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