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.
The wolf activity maps indicate wolf movement by watersheds, noted in purple, indicating a wolf or wolves' GPS collar identified it being in the watershed. However, they do not indicate the wolf ...
The map — which reports activity from Dec. 22 to Jan. 21 — shows wolf activity in watersheds touching parts of Lake, Chaffee, Park, Fremont, Jackson, Grand, Routt, Eagle, Summit, Garfield, Mesa, ...
The monthly Colorado Parks and Wildlife wolf activity map released Wednesday showed the collared female wolf traveled through watersheds that include Lake, Park, Chaffee and Fremont counties.
The map — which reports activity from Dec. 22 to Jan. 21 — shows wolf activity in watersheds touching parts of Lake, Chaffee, Park, Fremont, Jackson, Grand, Routt, Eagle, Summit, Garfield ...
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