20 gray wolves released in Pitkin, Eagle counties, Colorado Parks and Wildlife says

A gray wolf runs across a snow-covered field in British Columbia as a helicopter flies overhead during capture operations in January 2025. (Colorado Parks and Wildlife)
Fifteen brought from British Columbia; 5 were from captive Copper Creek pack

Twenty wolves have been released in Pitkin and Eagle counties in the second round of work to reestablish a self-sustaining population in Colorado, state wildlife officials said Sunday afternoon.

Seven males and eight females were captured over a six-day period in British Columbia where wolves are routinely culled to help support the recovery of the caribou herd in the province. CPW released five wolves in Colorado on each of three days: Jan. 12, 14 and 16.

Work to bring the animals from Canada began Jan. 10, two days after the state wildlife commission denied a petition from ranchers and their allies asking that the reintroduction program be paused. Voters in 2020 narrowly approved a ballot measure directing the state to work to restore wolves west of the Continental Divide.

A gray wolf travels into the distance at the release site on Jan. 14. (Colorado Parks and Wildlife)

The first group of 10 wolves from Oregon was released in Grand and Summit counties in December 2023, and conflicts between the animals and ranchers quickly arose.

Five of the animals released this month were members of the Copper Creek pack, which was captured in late August and early September after the adult male was found to be consistently preying on cattle and sheep in Grand County.

The adult male died soon after it was captured and a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service necropsy concluded a gunshot wound was responsible for the animal’s death, and the agency offered a reward for information leading to the arrest of the shooter. Five of the six surviving members of the pack (one puppy was not captured) were kept at a wildlife refuge until they were released together.

Colorado Parks and Wildlife workers complete paperwork using a crate as a work surface after releasing five gray wolves in Colorado on Jan. 16. (Colorado Parks and Wildlife photo)

The four pups and an adult female were released together to ensure the pups learn to hunt, giving them the best chance at survival, Colorado Parks and Wildlife said.

This agency decision to rerelease the Copper Creek animals considered multiple factors, including the health of the animals, the timing of the B.C. releases this year and the potential proximity to the new wolves.

“As I said at the time, options in the case of the Copper Creek pack were very limited, and this action is by no means a precedent for how CPW will resolve wolf-livestock conflict moving forward. The male adult wolf was involved in multiple depredations. Removing the male at that time, while he was the sole source of food and the female was denning, would likely have been fatal to the pups and counter to the restoration mandate,” CPW Director Jeff Davis said in a news release.