Colorado releases 15 wolves captured in Canada
Colorado Parks and Wildlife captured 15 wolves in British Columbia, Canada, in January of 2025 and released the animals in Pitkin and Eagle counties.
The potential move to Alaska comes amid concerns about securing wolves from British Columbia due to possible U.S.-Canada trade tensions.Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials have declined to confirm or deny discussions with Alaska.Alaska has a surplus of 7,000 to 11,000 wolves, and the proposed capture area has wolves with little livestock interaction.
A high-ranking Alaska official confirmed to the Coloradoan that Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials are in negotiations to secure the capture of wolves to release in Colorado this winter as part of its reintroduction program.
Doug Vincent-Lang, former director of the Division of Wildlife at the Alaska Department of Fish and Game before becoming a department commissioner, told the Coloradoan in a phone conversation Oct. 8 that Alaska and Colorado are signing, or have signed, a memorandum of understanding to capture wolves in the Tok area of Alaska to release in Colorado.
Vincent-Lang said those discussions first took place at the Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies meeting in Tucson on Sept. 21-24, when Colorado Parks and Wildlife Director Jeff Davis approached Alaska officials about capturing wolves.
Vincent-Lang said Davis called him directly a couple of weeks ago to work on negotiating the capture operation.
The Coloradoan, after receiving a tip, sent email messages to Davis and Colorado Parks and Wildlife spokesperson Luke Perkins on Sept. 30 and again Oct. 1 to confirm or deny if the agency had formal or informal talks with any Alaska officials regarding capturing wolves in Alaska for the next round of wolf reintroduction.
The agency refused to directly answer the question.
An email from Perkins on Sept. 30 stated, “CPW has explored multiple different sourcing locations to ensure it is able to fulfill its goal of capturing and releasing 10-15 wolves this year as outlined in our wolf management plan.”
When pressed in the Oct. 1 email to respond yes or no to the same question, Perkins responded, “CPW has already provided its comments on this topic. As Director Davis said in his interview with you last month, CPW doesn’t really live in a world of yes or no decisions or yes or no answers.
“As such I cannot confidently say whether or not Director Davis had any informal or formal interactions with the long list of attendees or if those interactions happened within his official capacity as Director of CPW.”
The Coloradoan also asked in those emails if Colorado Parks and Wildlife is still working with British Columbia to return to the Canadian province for a second straight year of wolf captures. The director had previously stated in June the agency was working with British Columbia, where it secured 15 wolves for release in Colorado in January of 2025.
Perkins responded, “CPW is working to finalize its plans for translocation efforts this winter and will not be making any announcements until all details and contracts are finalized.”
Why Colorado is turning to Alaska to capture wolves
Vincent-Lang said Colorado expressed concerns it may not be ble to reach a capture agreement with British Columbia because of tensions between Canada and the U.S. over tariffs and that Alaska may be a backup plan.
“I think the reasons they talked to us is there really is no state in the Lower 48 that will offer them up, the tariff issue and we have a surplus of wolves,” Vincent-Lang said.
Alaska is home to between 7,000 and 11,000 wolves.
Last year, Colorado Parks and Wildlife announced its agreement to capture wolves in British Columbia on Sept. 13. The agency has not made any public announcement this year anouncing a wolf capture agreement, which may be an indication of issues related to what Vincent-Lang addressed.
Colorado struggled securing wolves in 2023, after Wyoming, Montana and Idaho refused, and in 2024, when the Colville Tribe in Washington rescinded an agreement to provide wolves.
Vincent-Lang said Alaska would provide wolves from the Tok area because the state is currently lethally removing wolves from that area as part of a state effort to boost the Fortymile caribou herd. Tok is located approximately 93 miles from the Canadian border and 200 miles southeast of Fairbanks.
Colorado secured wolves last year in an area of British Columbia where the province was lethally removing wolves to assist declining caribou herds.
Vincent-Lang said capturing wolves in Alaska could prove more expensive than from British Columbia because of the distance. The Tok area is approximately 1,200 miles northwest of the area where Colorado captured wolves in British Columbia. However, it could be easier for Colorado to capture and translocate wolves within the U.S. rather than internationally.
Vincent-Lang said wolves in the Tok area mainly prey on carribou and moose with little livestock interaction.
Colorado Parks and Wildlife made it a point to capture wolves in an area of British Columbia with little to no interaction with livestock after capturing wolves from Oregon in December of 2023, some of which had a history of kiling cattle, a behavior that continued in Colorado, namely by the Copper Creek pack.
Davis previously told the Coloradoan that he doesn’t have specifics of how many British Columbia wolves have depredated on livestock in Colorado but believes it to be “a few,” while noting “I think our Oregon wolves have been on the landscape a little more and as you’ve pointed out there’s a particular number of animals (Copper Creek pack) that are mostly involved.”
Vincent-Lang said the best time to capture wolves in Alaska would be November, December or January when snow is on the ground. Those months would fit into Colorado’s timetable, as Davis has said it expects to capture wolves this winter for its third release.
Davis told the Coloradoan in a one-on-one interview Sept. 3 after this capture of up to 15 wolves, “I think it’s pause, monitor and manage.”
Nine of the 25 wolves captured and released in Colorado in the first two years of releases have died from various causes, including five captured in Britich Columbia.