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 ...
We’ll keep fighting to make sure wolves regain the protection they need and repopulate suitable habitat across the continent. The Center has been campaigning for gray wolves since our inception. While ...
The areas Colorado Parks and Wildlife released 20 wolves this month appear to have been revealed in CPW's wolf activity map ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s January watershed map offers the first look at where the state’s latest wolves have traveled ...
Colorado’s eight collared wolves in the wild spread out in the northern and northwestern parts of the state in December, according to a monthly tracking map released by Colorado Parks and Wildlife.
One wolf has ventured into the southern portion of Colorado, according to the latest map tracking wolf activity in the state.
The wolf activity maps indicate wolf movement by watersheds, noted in purple, indicating a wolf or wolves' GPS collar identified it being in the watershed. However, they do not indicate the wolf ...