A dry January across Colorado and the rest of the Rocky Mountain West has created a dichotomy of water haves and have-nots.
One of Colorado’s reintroduced wolves wandered farther southeast over the last month, exploring territory not yet traveled by any of the state’s collared wolves.
A Colorado Parks and Wildlife map showing where wolves were tracked in January. A Colorado Parks and Wildlife map showing where wolves were tracked in January. CPW Colorado voters passed a ballot ...
Fifteen wolves from Canada, have been spreading out across northwest Colorado after being released last month. There’s also ...
CDPHE launched an updated map that overlays geography, health conditions and starts to gauge what parts of Colorado are most ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s January watershed map offers the first look at where the state’s latest wolves have traveled since the agency released them in Eagle and Pitkin counties last week. The ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife told the Coloradoan ... which she did in late October or early November of last year. The latest map indicates that wolf has been in watersheds stretching as far ...
A female traveled in watersheds in Chaffee, Park and Fremont counties in January, according to a monthly tracking map released Wednesday by Colorado Parks and Wildlife. The new watersheds it ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s January watershed map offers the first look at where the state’s latest wolves have traveled since the agency released them in Eagle and Pitkin counties last week.