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March 20, 2025

Spain reverses ban on hunting wolves in north

Gray wolves were virtually exterminated in Europe 100 years ago but their numbers have rebounded since then to the current population of 20,300.
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Gray wolves were virtually exterminated in Europe 100 years ago but their numbers have rebounded since then to the current population of 20,300.

Spanish lawmakers on Thursday voted to end a ban on hunting wolves in the north of the country, three years after its introduction by Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's minority leftist government.

Spain declared Iberian wolves living north of the Douro river a in 2021, extending an existing hunting ban that was in place in the south over the objections of farmers who argued that it would lead to more attacks on their livestock.

Controlled hunting of the species had been allowed until then in the region which includes Asturias, Cantabria, Castile and León, and Galicia where the vast majority of the country's Iberian wolves live.

The reversal of the hunting ban was introduced via an amendment to a law on food waste and approved with the votes of lawmakers from the conservative main opposition Popular Party (PP), far-right Vox, Basque regional party PNV and Catalan separatists JxCat.

The amendment introduced by the PP stipulates that the capture and killing of wolves may be "justified" in the event of a threat to the Spanish "productive system," namely agricultural production.

It removes the wolf from a list of wild species under "special protection" north of the Douro.

Conservation group Ecologists in Action called the reversal of the hunting ban "irresponsible" while party PACMA described it as "the biggest step backwards in in years."

Members of the Bern Convention, tasked with the protection of wildlife in Europe and some African countries, in December agreed to lower the wolf's protection status from "strictly protected" to "protected."

Gray wolves were virtually exterminated in Europe 100 years ago but their numbers have rebounded since then to the current population of 20,300, mostly in the Balkans, Nordic countries, Italy and Spain.

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Spain has lifted a ban on hunting wolves in the north, reversing a 2021 decision that had declared Iberian wolves north of the Douro River a protected species. The amendment allows hunting if wolves threaten agricultural production, removing them from the "special protection" list. Conservationists criticize the move as detrimental to wildlife conservation. The Bern Convention recently downgraded the wolf's protection status from "strictly protected" to "protected."

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.