Mexican Gray Wolves vs. Rural Livelihoods: Cochise County Takes a Stand

Mexican Gray Wolves vs. Rural Livelihoods: Cochise County Takes a Stand

Ericka Piñon
Ericka Piñon
July 23, 2025

Cochise County supervisors voted unanimously Tuesday to challenge Arizona's Mexican Gray Wolf reintroduction program, demanding major changes after a wolf pack was removed for killing local cattle.

The 3-0 vote came weeks after a dramatic helicopter operation on May 27, when Arizona Game and Fish teams captured the Mañada del Arroyo wolf pack at Ed Ashurt's ranch. The pack had been attacking cattle for months, prompting neighbors to gather before dawn to watch the removal.

Wildlife managers used tranquilizer darts to capture two adult wolves and retrieved two pups from their den. The mother wolf and two pups showed signs of malnourishment, while a third pup was so sick it had to be euthanized. The surviving wolves now live in a New Mexico facility.

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The county resolution calls for full compensation for ranchers who lose livestock to wolves. Supervisors also backed the Arizona Game and Fish Department's Range Rider Program, which uses rangers to keep wolves away from cattle operations.

The vote followed a packed May meeting at Bisbee City Hall, where residents and ranchers complained about mounting livestock losses. For local ranchers, each wolf pack represents potential financial disaster, with attacks costing operations thousands of dollars.

Mexican Gray Wolves nearly disappeared in the 1970s but have made a remarkable comeback since reintroduction began in 1998. Wildlife officials documented a record 286 wolves in the wild in 2024, marking nine straight years of population growth.

This conservation success story creates tension with rural communities. Wildlife groups want expanded wolf releases to restore a native species that was systematically eliminated. Ranchers want protection from financial losses that can devastate their operations.

As the captured Mañada del Arroyo pack awaits its fate in captivity, the larger question remains whether wolf recovery and ranching can coexist. The debate will likely continue in courtrooms and county meetings across Arizona's rural counties, where the howl of the Mexican Gray Wolf represents both ecological triumph and economic challenge.

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Ericka Piñon

Ericka Piñon

Ericka Pinon is a state and federal reporter for Cactus Politics. She was born and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, and is fluent in both English and Spanish. She is currently studying Journalism and Mass Communications at Arizona State University.

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