A Swift Return Across State Lines
Gray wolf 2403 completed an unexpected interstate journey before officials returned it to Colorado. Authorities captured the wolf in New Mexico and transferred custody to Colorado Parks and Wildlife.
Colorado Parks and Wildlife released the wolf into Grand County wilderness. Agencies coordinated smoothly and avoided conflict during the transfer process.
Officials relied on cooperation rather than confrontation. Wildlife managers treated the relocation as routine population stewardship rather than a jurisdictional dispute.
Cooperation Keeps Conservation Moving
New Mexico’s Game and Fish Department captured the wolf under an existing Memorandum of Understanding. The agreement supports shared responsibility for managing regional gray wolf populations.
Colorado Parks and Wildlife credited the agreement for enabling quick action. Acting CPW Director Laura Clellan thanked New Mexico officials for their role in the operation.
Clellan emphasized that wolves ignore human borders. Agencies designed the agreement to protect ecosystems rather than respect state lines.
Strategic Release With Protection in Mind
Officials selected the release area carefully to reduce livestock conflict. Managers also placed the wolf near an unpaired female to support breeding potential.
Wildlife officials withheld the exact location to protect the animal. They aimed to limit human interference and discourage illegal tracking or poaching.
The agreement reflects collaboration between Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah. Wolf Conservation Program Manager Eric Odell described the effort as proactive planning in action.
Gray wolf 2403 now serves as a test case for regional conservation. Agencies hope future recoveries will follow the same cooperative model.

