Here is what we know after Colorado wildlife officials released 15 wolves caught in Canada as well as members of the Copper Creek pack.
Colorado has 15 more wolves, state wildlife officials announced Sunday. Members of the Copper Creek pack were also released back into the wild.
The areas Colorado Parks and Wildlife released 20 wolves this month appear to have been revealed in CPW's wolf activity map published Wednesday.
Colorado officials plan to capture up to 15 grey wolves from British Columbia's hinterlands to help the Centennial State re-establish the predators' long-lost population. In a statement ...
Colorado has released another wave of wolves in a program mandated by voters in 2020. Fifteen wolves were moved from central British Columbia to Colorado's Western Slope, where the releases are mandated.
Colorado Parks and Wildlife completes second year of gray wolf relocation, introducing 15 new wolves from British Columbia.
Wolves from British Columbia arrive in Colorado for reintroduction program. CPW remains tight-lipped on details of the operation.
Colorado Parks and Wildlife says 15 more wolves are now in the state as part of the revitalization effort for the species. The animals were released in Eagle and Pitkin Counties.
Colorado wildlife officials announced the second wave of releases of wolves from Canada in the central mountains over the last week, as part of the second wave of the state’s historic,
A year after Colorado kicked off its historic wolf restoration program, the state has brought a second group of Canadian wolves to the Western Slope.
The capture of 15 grey wolves in British Columbia and their release in Colorado is complete, an operation that led to unspecified threats against staff with Colorado Parks and Wildlife,
The article on wolves by M. John Fayhee points out the frustration with Colorado’s wolf translocation program. This frustration is understandable, and I empathize with rural residents and Indigenous c