Where are gray wolves found?
In the United States, the gray wolf was once found in Alaska and most of the continental United States, (except for part of coastal California and the southeast, where its range overlapped with that of the red wolf). Currently, there are self-sustaining populations in only seven states: Alaska, Montana, Wyoming, Idaho, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan. There is a small, experimental population on the border of Arizona and New Mexico, but it contains fewer than 30 individuals, and its numbers are regularly supplemented by captive bred animals.