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This May 25, 2014 photo provided by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife shows OR-26, a 100-pound adult male wolf trapped outside La Grande, Ore., and fitted with a GPS tracking collar. The wolf is the 26th to be fitted with a tracking collar since wolves started swimming the Snake River from Idaho in the 1990s. The latest estimate puts Oregon's wolf population 65. A similar collar on Oregon's famous wandering wolf, OR-7, made it possible to track his travels across Oregon into Northern Claifornia in search of a mate. (AP Photo/Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife)
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This May 25, 2014 photo provided by the Oregon Department of Fish and Willdife shows OR-26, a 100-pound adult male, after he was fitted with a GPS tracking collar outside La Grande, Ore. State biologists have been trapping more of Oregon's growing wolf population and fitting them with tracking collars. The position reports help ranchers know when wolves are near their livestock, and reveal where young wolves are going in search of mates and new territories. (AP Photo/Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife)