The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) recently published a report summarizing its management and conservation activities for gray wolves (Canis lupus) over the past 10 years.
“Ten Years of Gray Wolf Conservation and Management in California: 2015-2024” details CDFW’s wolf conservation and management efforts, including wolf monitoring techniques, wolf-livestock depredation investigations, wolf captures and population data for the state’s wolf packs known through 2024, including the minimum number of individuals, breeding pairs and litters produced.
Wolves were extirpated in California by 1924 and naturally returned to the state in 2011. The first pups born in California were documented in 2015. At the end of 2024, CDFW wildlife biologists documented at least 50 wolves in the state. Wolves are listed as endangered species under the California Endangered Species Act and the federal Endangered Species Act.
“Since the wolves’ return CDFW has been monitoring the growing wolf population, working to mitigate wolf-livestock conflict and conducting significant outreach to livestock producers and the public,” said CDFW Director Charlton H. Bonham. “Through these monitoring efforts, studies and outreach, CDFW and partners are building a toolkit that will offer solutions and resources for livestock producers while also allowing a native species to successfully come home.”
According to Tehama County Sheriff Dave Kain, CDFW also needs to address the inability to hunt wolves as their negative impact on the agricultural community continues.
He has been working with other rural sheriffs regarding the wolf population in the Northstate.
Kain confirmed that there have been wolf sightings in the county, and his office may be seeking an Tehama County Board of Supervisors meeting agenda item to declare an emergency in Tehama County. The declaration would be in conjunction with other county sheriffs and agencies to protect livestock and the livelihood of farmers and ranchers.
Starting in 2026, CDFW plans to produce an annual report about its wolf management and conservation activities, as guided by its 2016 Conservation Plan for Gray Wolves in California.
This first report describes 10 years of work by CDFW, such as community engagement efforts, non-lethal deterrent use and the creation of the Wolf-Livestock Compensation Program.
Maps included in the report show wolf activity in California as well as migration of collared wolves. While the Yowlumni pack has been established in Tulare County, all other known packs have home ranges in northeastern California.
The report highlights include a summary of past and ongoing research that will inform CDFW’s future management of wolves.
Months after the first wolf arrived in California, CDFW formed a stakeholder working group that was divided into three subgroups: A wolf-livestock subgroup focused on wolf impacts on livestock and agriculture, a wolf-ungulates subgroup focused on wolf impacts on deer and elk populations, and a wolf conservation subgroup focused on wolf sustainability and health issues. The outcomes of 44 meetings were analyzed.
Most prevalent were topics relating to the importance of and need for data on wolves in California, including their impact on livestock, wild prey and natural ecological communities; identifying wolf population recovery goals and whether a sustainable population can be maintained over time; how the California Endangered Species Act affects wolf management options; and where lethal controls would fit into wolf management.
The report also includes an analysis of the Lassen pack’s diet and notes the work of CDFW’s Wildlife Forensics Lab to create a reference library of wolf genetic samples. The genetic samples are used to determine the origins and relatedness of California’s wolves, differentiate scats and depredations by coyotes and dogs, identify the genetic “fingerprints” of individual wolves and even determine the coat color of wolves detected only by their DNA.