Proposition 114 would require the Colorado Parks and Wildlife Commission to create a plan to reintroduce and manage gray wolves — an endangered species — on designated lands west of the…| The Denver Post
With Colorado voters set to decide whether to order a re-introduction of wolves, wildlife officials using cameras and “howl surveys” say they’ve regularly detected multiple wolves…| The Denver Post
Colorado’s statewide wolf-reintroduction ballot initiative is rankling rural communities, rekindling old conflicts over the purpose of public lands. It’s straining the hard-won partners…| The Denver Post
Colorado Parks and Wildlife unveiled the results of genetic tests Thursday that confirm the presence of wolves — three females and one male related to each other — in the northwestern p…| The Denver Post
Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials announced on Wednesday that they’ve found evidence of wolves living in northwestern Colorado, news that comes days after state election officials placed …| The Denver Post
After months of collecting signatures, backers of a controversial ballot initiative that would reintroduce wolves in Colorado on Tuesday presented state officials with 211,093 signatures, more than…| The Denver Post
Wolves face a fresh push to strip away the federal protection that’s helped them recover from near-extinction, while deer, antelope and moose may get government help in Colorado and other sta…| The Denver Post
Hundreds of miles of Colorado wilderness lost to 21st-century development boom| The Denver Post
Colorado turns cold shoulder to endangered wolves| The Denver Post