News

The Colorado River from Glenwood Springs to the Utah border is now considered positive for zebra mussels, an invasive species ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife has confirmed plans to begin treating part of the Colorado River for invasive zebra mussels. The ...
Several Colorado Democrats are using the recent detections of zebra mussels in the Colorado River to push for implementation ...
State officials may have solved the puzzle of how zebra mussels got into the Colorado River.
CPW coordinates efforts to combat invasive zebra mussels in Colorado, using a copper-based molluscicide and intensive river ...
With the discovery of additional larvae this summer, the Colorado River from Glenwood Springs to the Utah border is now considered positive for zebra mussels. The river can shed that designation ...
Zebra mussel larvae found in critical river near Grand Junction, Parks and Wildlife says The Colorado River is seen in the reflection of a car mirror parked at a roadside pull-off along State ...
In the Colorado River, native fish may be starved of their plankton diets due to the mussels gobbling up the plankton first. "Zebra mussels pose an extreme risk of ecological impacts to Colorado.
Photo of a zebra mussel veliger discovered by CPW in the Colorado River near Grand Junction after routine testing in early July. A veliger is the mussel’s free-floating (planktonic) larval stage ...
A new bill making its way through the federal legislature aims to stop the spread of invasive aquatic species including zebra mussels in the Colorado River and other western United States waterways.
Colorado Parks and Wildlife has ended testing for invasive zebra mussels for the year, but not for good, in the Colorado River and Government Highline Canal after finding no additional ...
About a week after Colorado Parks and Wildlife announced initial evidence of invasive zebra mussels in the Colorado River near Grand Junction, the agency has confirmed more signs. The species, which ...