News

State officials may have solved the puzzle of how zebra mussels got into the Colorado River. On July 3, Colorado Parks and ...
CPW coordinates efforts to combat invasive zebra mussels in Colorado, using a copper-based molluscicide and intensive river ...
Discoveries of the invasive and damaging zebra mussels have been piling up in Western Colorado, with recent detections in ...
Zebra mussels are similar to another invasive mollusk, the quagga mussel, which has not been detected in Colorado’s lakes and ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife let Coloradans know that zebra mussels have been found in a private body of water in Eagle County ...
The Colorado River from Glenwood Springs to the Utah border is now considered positive for zebra mussels, an invasive species ...
According to the Post Independent, Colorado Parks and Wildlife found the lone mussel larvae — called a "veliger" — along the ...
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 ...
On Monday the Colorado Basin Roundtable had a meeting to discuss the state of the Colorado River. The Roundtable discussed ...
A zebra mussel veliger discovered by Colorado Parks and Wildlife in the Colorado River near Grand Junction after routine testing in early July. A veliger is the mussel’s free-floating ...
No adult zebra mussels have been found in the Colorado River. That’s good news for the river: Once adult populations are established, eradication is nearly impossible and can cost millions of ...
Zebra mussel veligers, the larval stage of zebra mussels, were found earlier this month during routine testing on the Government Highline Canal and in subsequent testing of the Colorado River.