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Wildlife officials believe that a wolf linked to livestock killings may be breeding, according to reports

A wolf stands inside its enclosure at the Colorado Wolf and Wildlife Center (CWWC) in Divide, Colorado on March 28, 2023. – CWWCs 35 acre property is home to 18 wolves, and offers daily tours. In 2020, Colorado voters passed Proposition 114, which required Colorado Parks and Wildlife to reintroduce gray wolves to designated lands on the western side of the Continental Divide no later than Dec. 31, 2023. Wolves that have wandered into Colorado from the neighboring state of Wyoming have put ranchers on edge that their livestock may become prey, as well as presented challenges to the outcome of the reintroduction program. (Photo by Jason Connolly / AFP) (Photo by JASON CONNOLLY/AFP via Getty Images)

Wildlife officials said they will not remove a gray wolf potentially connected to recent livestock killings after finding out it may be breeding.

Officials stated they will not take away a gray wolf that may be linked to recent livestock killings. Recent livestock killings, despite requests from stockgrowers.

Two of the gray wolves reintroduced to Colorado’s Grand County in December — including one suspected in recent depredations — are likely “denning” and in the breeding process, Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials said in a letter to the Middle Park Stockgrowers Board Tuesday. The letter came in response to a request from the board to lethally remove two wolves suspected in the livestock attacks.

Taking out the male wolf “would be irresponsible management and potentially cause the den to fail, possibly resulting in the death of the presumed pups,” CPW Director Jeff Davis wrote in Tuesday’s letter.

In early April, the female wolf’s GPS stopped uploading location points to the server and only started uploading again recently, according to Davis. Officials believe she was in the den, which interrupted the tracking collar’s signal and aligns with the expected timing of wolf reproduction.

CPW officers are working to confirm the den’s location.

Colorado’s first confirmed wolf depredation incident happened on April 2 in Grand County. The second attack came just five days later, 60 miles north in Jackson County.

On April 18, the total number of livestock killed by wolves reached six as wildlife officials confirmed two more calf attacks.

Amid reports of livestock attacks and depredations, one of the 10 gray wolves reintroduced to Colorado was found dead in Larimer County, federal officials confirmed Tuesday.

Initial evidence shows the wolf likely died of natural causes, but an official autopsy has not yet been completed.

“The wolf population in Colorado is far below any restoration goal,” Davis wrote in Tuesday’s letter. “We have the legal duty to establish a self-sustaining population of wolves while minimizing conflict risk.”

As the wolf population in Colorado grows, the approach to lethal removals will likely become more liberal, Davis wrote.

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