The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has reached an agreement with the majority of plaintiffs, including Defenders of Wildlife, The Greater Yellowstone Coalition, and eight other conservation organizations, to settle ongoing litigation over a federal district court’s 2010 decision to reinstate Endangered Species Act protections for gray wolves in the Northern Rocky Mountains.  According to a news release from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, If approved by the court, the settlement offers a path for the service to return management of the recovered wolf populations in Idaho and Montana to the states while the service considers options for delisting gray wolves across the Rocky Mountain region, where population levels have returned to biologically recovered levels.Under the terms of the settlement, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has agreed to address the delisting of wolves in the region in the future as a distinct population segment, rather than on a state-by-state basis. The parties are requesting that the court allow the 2009 delisting to be reinstated in Montana and Idaho on an interim basis, in accordance with approved State Management Plans, until a full delisting can be completed for the Northern Rocky Mountain wolf population. The parties are agreeing that they allow these steps to move forward, up to and including a potential delisting of Rocky Mountain wolves, without resorting to further litigation. Separate negotiations are ongoing between the service and the State of Wyoming in an effort to reach agreement on a management plan for wolves in that state. If a mutually acceptable management plan for wolves in Wyoming can be developed, then the service will be able to proceed with delisting proceedings addressing wolves throughout the northern rocky mountains

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