Coloradoโs wolf population grew this spring with the formation of three new packs.
The state designated the new wolf families as the One Ear Pack in Jackson County, the King Mountain Pack in Routt County and the Three Creeks Pack in Rio Blanco County.
They join the Copper Creek pack, which formed in Grand County last year and was moved to Pitkin County in January.
The new pack designations were mentioned in a “wolf update” slideshow presentation, which was included in the online agenda for an upcoming Parks and Wildlife Commission meeting on Thursday.
CPW has not announced how many pups have been confirmed in each of the new packs. Last year, the agency did not name the Copper Creek pack until pups were confirmed.
Earlier this year, CPW said it was monitoring as many as four potential dens for new pups.

A CPW spokesperson on Monday confirmed the newly-designated packs and said the agency would not share more information about them until the commission meeting on Thursday.
โUntil that presentation has been delivered, CPW will not have any additional information available,โ spokesperson Luke Perkins said. โCPW recognizes packs only after a breeding pair of wolves have reproduced in late spring. Once a pack has been officially recognized it is generally named after the geographical area where it has set up its territory.โ
“The proof is in the pupping”
Wolf advocates celebrated the news that more wolves in the state have had pups.
Rob Edward of the Rocky Mountain Wolf Project said they’re vital to achieving a self-sustaining population.
โWe are putting a lot of money into going and fetching wolves and bringing them back here and releasing them in male and female quantities that facilitate possible pairing,โ he said. โThe proof is in the pupping. This speaks volumes about the success of this historic effort.โ
Colorado’s wolf restoration has also generated controversy. Several ranchers have recently called for the removal of the Copper Creek Pack near Snowmass following several attacks on livestock last spring.
At the commission meeting last month, Colorado Parks and Wildlife CommissionerTai Jacober, a rancher who lives in the area of the attacks, attempted to call a vote to remove the pack, calling them “bad animals.”
The vote was ruled out of order and the commission did not take any action after other commissioners raised concerns about intervening in decisions usually made by CPW biologists.
Despite the recent depredations, Edwards said his organization is proud of the restoration efforts.
“The reality is the majority of wolves on the ground are out there not getting into conflict, which means theyโre out there eating elk and deer and they’re doing exactly what wolves are supposed to do,” he said. “The Rocky Mountain Wolf Project celebrates this news and the great work that Colorado Parks and Wildlife are doing to fulfill the will of the people.”
Colorado voters in 2021 directed Colorado Parks and Wildlife to begin reintroducing gray wolves west of the Continental Divide by the end of 2023. The first group of animals, from Oregon, was released in December 2023. The second group, from British Columbia, was released in January.
The news of newly-formed packs comes weeks after a string of deaths of Colorado’s reintroduced wolves.
Six have died this year, including wolf 2505-BC, a male from British Columbia killed by federal agents in Wyoming after it attacked sheep, and wolf 2405 s yearling male from the Copper Creek pack that was shot in May by wildlife officers attempting to upset a pattern of attacks on cattle in Pitkin County.
This story first appeared at KUNC.org on June 15, 2025.
