Colorado Parks and Wildlife will continue wolf reintroduction with or without the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the ...
The latest news on Colorado’s precarious and dwindling wolf pack was unsurprising. As reported Sunday in The Gazette, yet another of the wolves relocated to Colorado from Oregon not long ago has died.
One of the original wolves brought to Colorado from Colorado has died after an attempt to capture it, the’s state wildlife agency said. The Colorado Parks and Wildlife identified the wolf as No. 2305 ...
Colorado’s wolves made their first appearance within some southern Front Range watersheds in February. Colorado Parks and ...
A healthy wolf died during a Colorado Parks and Wildlife capture operation, raising questions from wolf experts.
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How many wolves is too many for the wild to handle?
The question of how many wolves a region can sustain without tipping the balance against prey herds, livestock operations, and the wolves themselves has no clean answer. Since the federal government ...
Although a spectacular photo taken by a wildlife photographer in Yellowstone may give the illusion that this grizzly and two ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife has revealed new information about how a wolf died in its custody in Routt County this January.
Colorado Parks and Wildlife reports that one of the state's wolves died from "acute cardiogenic shock" after the wolf was ...
The number of Mexican gray wolves in Arizona and New Mexico grew to at least 319 in 2025, as the species inches closer to possible downlisting from endangered to threatened.
State and federal wildlife agencies counted 319 endangered Mexican gray wolves across Arizona and New Mexico this past year. Up from 286 the previous year, it marks a decade of steady recovery.
Arizona and New Mexico wildlife agencies recently reported that the population of endangered Mexican gray wolves grew by 33 wolves last year.
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