Current:Home > NewsColorado to release gray wolves: Here's when, where and why. -Excel Money Vision
Colorado to release gray wolves: Here's when, where and why.
View
Date:2025-04-13 10:25:54
DENVER ‒ Colorado officially launches a controversial experiment next month: State officials will release up to 10 gray wolves as mandated by a 2020 state law that unleashed proverbial howls of protest from opponents.
Wolves have long been a divisive species, particularly in rural areas where many farmers and ranchers consider them an unacceptable risk to both humans and livestock. But for many Americans, they evoke a powerful and meaningful emotional connection with wild places and the natural world.
In keeping with that divide, Colorado voters barely approved the wolves' reintroduction, and the law received most of its support from liberal urban residents living far from where the wolves will be released.
Colorado is planning to release dozens of wolves captured from Oregon over time, with officials hoping that will be enough to ultimately create self-sustaining packs totaling 150-200 animals.
While many other western states today have healthy wolf populations, Colorado is home to only a handful of wild wolves after the species was largely exterminated nationally by the 1940s. Due to their near-elimination, wolves were among the first animals protected by the 1973 Endangered Species Act, which obligated the federal government to try restoring them to the landscape.
"The return of the wolf to Colorado has the potential to be an historic ecological success..." Michael Saul, Rockies and Plains field director for Defenders of Wildlife, said in a statement.
What's so controversial about wolves?
Backers of Colorado's reintroduction plan say that wolves are a natural and important part of the ecosystem in the West, and that humans had no right to exterminate them. They argue that safety concerns are wildly overblown, and that ranchers and farmers who lose livestock will be fairly compensated by taxpayers.
But farmers and ranchers consider wolves a dangerous threat to wildlife and stock alike. A single adult wolf can kill and eat as many as 20 elk annually, and ranchers worry they'll have to spend more protecting their cows and sheep, cutting into their already-thin margins.
Federal officials began relocating Canadian wolves into Yellowstone National Park in the mid-1990s, and then to other western states a decade later. Long-running court battles among the states, wildlife defenders, the federal government and other parties have complicated relocation and management efforts.
Today, wolves in the Lower 48 are protected from hunting under a 2022 federal court order that overruled a Trump administration decision to let state agencies permit people to hunt wolves in some states. Following that Trump decision, state officials in Montana, Wyoming and Idaho killed 20 wolves that stepped outside Yellowstone National Park.
Congress is currently considering a measure proposed by Colorado Rep. Lauren Boebert, a Republican, to overturn that court decision and give control back to the states so hunters can kill wolves if state officials conclude there are too many living in an area.
Colorado had to get special permission from the federal government to create and manage the new wolf pack. The existing wild wolves in the state likely moved down from Wyoming, according to officials, with evidence they have been breeding.
Where are the Colorado wolves coming from?
After approaching multiple other states, Colorado officials persuaded their counterparts in Oregon to let them trap and relocate up to 10 wolves this year. The wolves will be tranquilized, screened for diseases, tooth decay and other potential problems. The captured wolves chosen for relocation will be 1-5 years old, and both male and female. They will be trucked or flown to Colorado in "sturdy aluminum crates" before being released, wearing GPS trackers.
Several states refused to give Colorado wolves, in part because many conservative-led states generally oppose seeing wolf populations grow. Wyoming and Utah officials are worried that Colorado's new wolves will ignore state borders, and have already signaled they want Colorado to pay if the new wolves kill their livestock.
Colorado now plans to release up to 50 wolves captured from Oregon
“We are deeply grateful for Oregon’s partnership in this endeavor, and we are now one step closer to fulfilling the will of the voters in time,” Colorado Gov. Jared Polis said in a press release.
Where are the Colorado wolves being released?
The exact locations will be kept secret, but the wolves will generally be released on state or private land in a rural area of west-central Colorado. Officials who selected the release area considered the nearby human population and its political support for wolves, and access to prey animals like elk and deer. It's also far from borders with Utah, Wyoming and New Mexico, and tribal lands in southwest Colorado.
Specifically, the area generally includes the cities of Aspen, Gunnison and Glenwood Springs, but is otherwise largely rural with relatively few cattle or sheep ranches. The wolves are not being released onto federal land, although they will likely end up on it: 36% of Colorado is federal property.
A study from the 1995 wolf reintroductions in Yellowstone National Park found the animals moved as far as 140 miles from their release point, although most remained within 50 miles of the dropoff point. Federal officials say those newly introduced wolves killed 256 sheep and 41 cows on nearby ranches in the first eight years after their reintroduction to the park.
In 2021, wolves living in northern Colorado killed a 500-pound cow ‒ the first documented wolf kill of livestock in Colorado in at least 70 years.
veryGood! (96)
Related
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Watch this family reunite with their service dog who went missing right before Christmas
- Kirk Cousins leads 'Skol' chant before Minnesota Vikings' game vs. Green Bay Packers
- 2023 NFL MVP odds tracker: Lamar Jackson is huge favorite heading into final week
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- On her 18th birthday, North Carolina woman won $250,000 on her first ever scratch-off
- Penn State defense overwhelmed by Ole Miss tempo and ‘too many moving parts’ in Peach Bowl loss
- Russia launches fresh drone strikes on Ukraine after promising retaliation for Belgorod attack
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- High surf advisories remain in some parts of California, as ocean conditions begin to calm
Ranking
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- That's a wrap: Lamar Jackson solidifies NFL MVP case with another dazzling performance
- In Iowa, Nikki Haley flubs Hawkeyes star Caitlin Clark's name
- NFL playoff format: How many teams make it, how many rounds are there and more
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- When is the 2024 Super Bowl? What fans should know about date, time, halftime performer
- Oregon newspaper forced to lay off entire staff after discovering that an employee embezzled funds
- Houthis show no sign of ending ‘reckless’ Red Sea attacks as trade traffic picks up, commander says
Recommendation
A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
German chancellor tours flooded regions in the northwest, praises authorities and volunteers
2023 NFL MVP odds tracker: Lamar Jackson is huge favorite heading into final week
This group has an idea to help save the planet: Everyone should go vegan
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
2024 Winter Classic: Live stream, time, weather, how to watch Golden Knights at Kraken
Nigel Lythgoe Responds to Paula Abdul's Sexual Assault Allegations
'Our expectations fell very short': Dolphins in tough spot as division crown hangs in balance