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by Laura Zuckerman, Reuters

Conservation groups have asked a U.S. appeals court to strike down a move by Congress to strip more than 1,500 wolves in Idaho and Montana of federal endangered species protections.

In a petition to the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, the groups sought to overturn a ruling last week by a federal judge that found Congress did not exceed its authority in April when it allowed a measure removing wolves from the endangered species list.

The ruling by U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy came days after Idaho announced plans to cut its wolf population from about 1,000 to no fewer than 150 by hunting and trapping, and less than a month after Montana set a wolf-hunting quota of 220 out of a population of 566.

“The states want to decimate the wolf population in the Northern Rockies,” said Michael Garrity, executive director of the Montanabased Alliance for the Wild Rockies. “We want to stop this massive killing that is about to occur.”

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in the mid-1990s reintroduced fewer than 100 wolves to the region after hunting, trapping and poisoning had pushed western wolves nearly to extinction.

The Department of the Interior, which oversees the Fish and Wildlife Service, had no immediate comment.

As wolf numbers climbed in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming, those states have argued the animals no longer needed Endangered Species Act protections to survive. The federal government agreed, but plans to delist wolves were blocked by conservationists’ lawsuits.

Wolves were most recently delisted in Idaho and Montana in 2009 when the Fish and Wildlife Service approved wolf management plans by those two states but rejected one in Wyoming, where it was legal to kill most wolves.

Environmentalists sued, arguing Northern Rockies wolves were part of a single population and could not be delisted in Idaho and Montana while remaining protected in Wyoming.

Originally published here.

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