Colorado has 15 more wolves, state wildlife officials announced Sunday. Members of the Copper Creek pack were also released ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s January watershed map offers the first look at where the state’s latest wolves have traveled ...
Over the past month, one female wolf has gone as far south as Fremont County, according to Colorado Parks and Wildlife.
It’s extremely quiet. Only the slight shifting of boots in the snow, rustling of jackets, and the occasional plane humming ...
One of Colorado’s reintroduced wolves wandered farther southeast over the last month, exploring territory not yet traveled by ...
A female gray wolf traveled in watersheds—alongside natural water sources such as rivers and streams—in Chaffee, Park and Fremont counties in January, according to Colorado Parks and Wildlife's ...
with hopes of growing that population to a minimum of 150 to 200 wolves over the next several years. A female wolf was the first, and only one to date, from the initial release to cross I-70 ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife captured seven male wolves and eight female wolves from the central interior of British Columbia, Canada, and released them in Colorado last week, according to a news ...