News

Invasive species can spread easily across Colorado’s waterways and cause significant impacts. In this week’s Outdoor Colorado ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials killed a gray wolf from the Copper Creek Pack linked to four livestock attacks on the ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife has begun aquatic nuisance species sampling efforts on the Colorado River for 2025.
Colorado's wolf compensation fund sees claims approaching double the amount. Ranchers excluded from public comment on wolf ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife officers successfully removed a cow and two calf moose from River Creek Park on Wednesday and ...
A pair of orphaned bobcats were ready to go back to the Colorado wilderness after putting on more than eight times their body ...
Governor Jared Polis signed Senate Bill 25-168 on Monday, giving Colorado Parks and Wildlife greater authority to battle ...
This invader is eating through Colorado’s rivers, and it could wipe out native fish and plants if left unchecked.
The zebra mussel and its buddy, the quagga mussel, are not wanted in Colorado. That is why the CPW has set up 77 boat ...
Another wolf that was reintroduced to Colorado has died, and wildlife officials are continuing to monitor several potential ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife relocated a mother moose and her calves from an urban park to a wilder area for safety reasons.
It’s high time for leadership to soundly repudiate hostility to wolves and to acknowledge in public that wolves bring vast ...