Colorado Parks and Wildlife biologists face blizzard during state animal restoration project
DENVER (KDVR) — Colorado Parks and Wildlife biologists are braving a blizzard to continue work on their bighorn sheep project, the organization posted on X.
Commonly referred to as rams, although females are called ewes, the curly-horned ovis has become a legendary animal in the United States and had such an influence in Colorado, that the Rocky Mountain Bighorn Sheep was named the state animal in 1961.
Millions of bighorn sheep used to scale the cliffs in North America at the beginning of the 19th century but that number plummeted to only 20,000 in 1940 and current numbers only hover around 70,000, according to Defenders of Wildlife.
How will Denver's new NWSL team get its players?
There are many factors that influenced the decline of the bighorn sheep population, according to Defenders of Wildlife, some of those include:
Competition with domestic livestock for foraging
Loss of water sources from human diversion or livestock use
Mining operations
Vehicle collisions on highways
Military bombing on training ranges
Introduction of livestock that spread disease
Overhunting
Climate change
Habitat loss
To help restore the population of the bighorn sheep in Colorado, CPW has been relocating bighorn sheep to create a new herd in the state.
CPW biologist, Ty Woodward, is leading a team that is using a baiting system to trap and relocate the bighorn sheep. Every morning the team sets up alfalfa and apple pulp to train the bighorn sheep to return to the location of the food. Eventually, a net trap will be used to capture and relocate the bighorn sheep.
CPW said this is an effort to restore the bighorn sheep which are the state animal, as well as the symbol for the CPW organization itself.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Keep Colorado Wild Pass helps fund search and rescue drone conference
DENVER (KDVR) — Douglas County Search and Rescue partnered with Colorado Parks and Wildlife for the first-ever Rocky Mountain SAR UAS Conference, held May 31 at the Highlands Ranch Law Enforcement Training Facility. The event focused on search and rescue teams' usage of unmanned aerial systems, aka drones, during operations. The SAR team can use the tool to search large areas quickly, get an overhead look at a situation, scan the area using thermal cameras and communicate remotely with the people once located with a drone. Parker police use drone to find child who didn't return from playground It's something the Douglas County team is familiar with: In March, the Douglas County SAR was called to Roxborough State Park for two teenagers who got lost near Carpenter Peak. The team used drones to search for the teens and quickly located them after seeing a flashing light. Using the drone's technology, the team was able to have a family member communicate with the teenagers. 'From their standpoint, here they are lost in the wilderness, you know, you could hear dad coming over the speaker with some positive words of encouragement. I think it really uplifted their spirits,' drone lead Darren Keralla of DCSAR told FOX31's Kasia Kerridge. 'We can't receive audio, but we typically ask them if you're OK, give me a thumbs up, and they'll respond with a thumbs up. We can interpret a lot from their motions and what they're communicating back to us physically.' The conference drew together over 60 drone professionals from over 25 agencies in Colorado, where they shared best practices and lessons learned. 'This event was an outstanding success,' said Brent Lounsbury, Emergency Management Coordinator for CPW, in a release. 'Douglas County SAR identified the need for an event where SAR UAS professionals could collaborate and learn from each other; it clearly hit the mark. We're really looking forward to this event coming around again next year, and it being an even larger success.' Colorado's search and rescue teams are all staffed by volunteers, and CPW's Backcountry SAR program helps funnel funds from sales of the Keep Colorado Wild Pass, as well as hunting and fishing licenses, to search and rescue teams around the state. The pass costs $29 for Colorado residents and can be added to your vehicle registration. CPW says clean boats make for happy lakes CPW noted that modern drones have high-tech cameras and sensors that can provide inaccessible views for ground crews. The agency also uses drones for wildlife and land management. 'This conference allowed us to get everyone in a room, make contacts and share best practices. I particularly enjoyed the question and answer sessions after each presentation, where critical discussions and learning were exchanged peer-to-peer,' said Dave Miska, president of Douglas County SAR, in CPW's release. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


CBS News
6 days ago
- CBS News
Three recent Colorado moose attacks all involved people with their dogs
Colorado Parks and Wildlife is urging caution after three separate moose attacks in three days across the state. The department says it's mostly a coincidence that all of the attacks happened in a stretch of only a few days. The incidents range from Fairplay on Friday, May 30, to Grand Lake on Saturday, May 31, and one in Steamboat Springs on Sunday, June 1, where a woman was actually flow to a hospital because of her injuries. In all three incidents, the people attacked had dogs with them, and in the Fairplay attack the dogs were not on a leash. CPW said without question unleashed dogs are by far the most prevalent instigation for moose attacks in Colorado. "If you have your animal off leash, you're not only potentially adding that danger and injury to your animal, but also to yourself," Rachael Gonzales, a spokesperson for CPW. "So a lot of times your dogs, their instinct, they're going to run back towards their human, which then that turns that animal, in this case, a moose, back towards you as well." In Friday's incident in Park County, two women walking with their dogs were trampled by a moose. They escaped by climbing onto a roof and used a fire extinguisher to haze the moose away. CPW said no serious injuries were reported. Saturday was a more serious attack in Grand County. A cow moose charged a couple and knocked a woman to the ground, who then crawled under a small storage area next to their house, according to CPW. Her partner shot and killed the moose in self defense. A calf was later euthanized by CPW due to concerns about its ability to survive in the wild without its mother, and inability to be rehabilitated. Sunday brought yet another attack in Routt County, where a woman walking leashed dogs was seriously injured by a cow moose. A man who was paddleboarding close to the attack in River Creek Park stopped to help and was also kicked. The park, located in Steamboat Springs, is now closed through Wednesday as CPW assesses the area. "In that case, she had her dogs on a leash," Gonzales said. "Unfortunately, she was just at the wrong place at the wrong time." The best advice? Keep dogs on a leash and give moose plenty of space. Gonzales said you can watch for a few signs a moose is getting irritated, and more likely to charge. "Things like licking its lips, its ears are pinned back ... the little heckles and hairs on its back are going to be sticking up. It may be pacing back and forth," Gonzales explained. "Keep an eye on those signs, because if you start to see that, that's your signal that that moose is uncomfortable for whatever reason."
Yahoo
03-06-2025
- Yahoo
Another Colorado wolf dead, CPW watching 4 potential dens for pups
DENVER (KDVR) — Another wolf that was reintroduced to Colorado has died, and wildlife officials are continuing to monitor several potential dens where there may be new pups. Colorado Parks and Wildlife announced Monday that it received a mortality alert for the male gray wolf 2507 on May 31, and said the wolf died in northwest Colorado. Colorado Parks and Wildlife kills grey wolf in Pitkin County after attacks on livestock Because the species is federally listed under the Endangered Species Act, the death is being investigated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. CPW said the cause of death will be determined in a necropsy as part of the investigation. Further details about the death have not been released, but the agency said it is continuing to monitor wolf activity, including four potential dens. 'It is likely there are an unknown number of new pups that were born this year,' CPW said in a press release. The agency said it is working on plans for translocation efforts in the coming year so that the state's wolf population will continue to grow, leading to a self-sustaining population, in addition to the new pups. A total of six wolves that were relocated to the Centennial State have died so far this year. Last week, CPW announced that it had killed a gray wolf in Pitkin County after reports of chronic depredation despite livestock producers' non-lethal efforts to deter wolves from their animals. Last month, another gray wolf in northwest Colorado died. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.