General Areas Inhabited by Gray Wolves in Colorado & CPW launches depredation report webpage
By Dave Shaffer

Collared gray wolf activity recorded by CPW from Mar. 26 to Apr. 23, 2024

Collared gray wolf activity recorded by CPW from Feb. 28 to Mar. 25, 2024
Above is an updated map published today by Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s showing where collared wolves have been in the previous month.
Notable Updates
- This map was created using GPS data from all functioning collars in Colorado.
- One of the collars placed on a wolf translocated from Oregon is no longer providing signals to CPW biologists. The animal with the failed collar is traveling with another animal with a functional collar, which currently allows CPW to monitor that animal. CPW has confirmed that the animal with the malfunctioning collar is still alive based on visual confirmation from an airplane.
- A collar on another wolf has been identified as partially functional and may not be fully functional in the near future.
- There have been no wolf mortalities in Colorado and no reported livestock depredation in the last 30 days.
For comparison, below is the map for the previous month.

Collared gray wolf activity recorded by CPW from Jan. 23, to Feb. 27, 2024
Above is an updated map published today by Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s showing where collared wolves have been in the past 35 days. This map was created using GPS collar data collected from all collared wolves in Colorado.
Notable movements
This wolf collar data shows that two wolves traveled broadly in the last month from western Routt County into eastern Moffat County.
For comparison, below is the original map.

Collared gray wolf activity recorded by CPW from Dec. 18, 2023 to Jan. 22, 2024
About the GPS collar data
- Currently, the collars are programmed to record a position every four hours.
- Once four locations have been recorded, the packet of four locations is then transmitted via satellite to CPW biologists.
- The frequency of both position recording and transmission of the data can be delayed by a number of factors such as dense cloud cover, closed terrain, etc.
- By looking at the data, CPW staff can learn where wolves have been, but they cannot tell where wolves are at a current point in time, nor can they predict where the wolves will go.
- To protect the wolves, specific GPS data will not be shared.



1 Response
history is fact and why do we need to relive this again because where I live the passed ten years of new fact based history is showing the same information from when they were controled in the early 1900