
White-nose Syndrome threatening Colorado Bat Colonies
CPW joins nationwide efforts to monitor bat populations for “white-nose syndrome” – a deadly, fungus that has been wiping out colonies of bats.
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CPW joins nationwide efforts to monitor bat populations for “white-nose syndrome” – a deadly, fungus that has been wiping out colonies of bats.

Thanks to huge, visually stunning images adorning Colorado Parks and Wildlife hatchery trucks, the fish are now doing the catching – eye-catching, that is.

CPW biologists spend months catching lesser prairie chickens in Kansas to release in Colorado after state’s population dropped to single digits.

Eight orphaned bear cubs are now sleeping peacefully on Pikes Peak, snug inside artificial dens.

A recent survey by Colorado Parks and Wildlife biologists found rainbow trout thriving in the Arkansas River near Salida offering a hopeful sign for wildlife conservation efforts aimed at overcoming whirling disease, which decimated trout populations in Colorado after its discovery in the 1980s.

From the passenger seat of a pickup truck going 60 m.p.h. down a southeast Colorado highway, April Estep scanned the landscape using her hand to shield her eyes from the blinding dawn sun. Estep, a Colorado Parks and Wildlife (CPW) wildlife biologist and raptor expert,
Colorado Outdoors, Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s magazine, features a wealth of information for hunters, anglers and outdoors enthusiasts.