Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s January watershed map offers the first look at where the state’s latest wolves have traveled ...
By the 1960s gray ... wolf recovery is far from over. Wolves need connected populations for genetic sustainability, and natural ecosystems need wolves to maintain a healthy balance of species. Yet ...
A female gray wolf traveled in watersheds—alongside natural ... according to Colorado Parks and Wildlife's monthly tracking map, released on Wednesday. This is further southeast than any of ...
The gray wolf, also known as the timber wolf or the western wolf, is a canid native to the wilderness and remote areas of North America, Eurasia, and North Africa. It is the largest extant member ...
One wolf has ventured into the southern portion of Colorado, according to the latest map tracking wolf activity in the state.