Enhancing Safety for Animals Act of 2025
The bill would remove federal Endangered Species Act protections for the Mexican wolf, shifting management toward state control and potentially changing habitat protections.
The bill would remove federal Endangered Species Act protections for the Mexican wolf, shifting management toward state control and potentially changing habitat protections.
HR 4255 seeks to remove the Mexican wolf from the lists of threatened and endangered species under the Endangered Species Act of 1973. By doing so, it aims to eliminate federal protections currently in place for the species. The bill likely contends that the Mexican wolf population has recovered sufficiently or that ongoing protections are no longer justified, allowing for changes in management or control of the species.
The Mexican wolf has been a focal point in wildlife conservation due to its status as one of the most endangered wolf subspecies. Removing it from endangered status could have significant ecological and policy implications, altering habitat protections, predator management, and state vs. federal oversight. It also marks a broader policy shift in how endangered species protections are evaluated and maintained.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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