-
Nearly a half-million people got a Utah license to hunt and fish this year. Money raised from those license sales goes toward habitat restoration and conservation efforts across the state.
-
The federal government is spending more than $200 million to reopen spawning grounds for fish, which includes an effort to recover an endangered species sacred to the Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe in Nevada.
-
The U.S. Department of Agriculture reports that avian influenza was confirmed in a flock of 47,300 turkeys in Jerauld County of South Dakota on Oct. 4 and at a farm with 141,800 birds in Utah's Sanpete County last Friday.
-
The invasive rusty crayfish was discovered in Lake Granby, and Colorado Parks and Wildlife is concerned because of its proximity to the Colorado River.
-
The federal government wants to expand the sage grouse’s protected range, and Wyoming is skeptical about that plan. So, officials and locals recently put their heads together about it to craft their own plan.
-
Latino Conservation Week features events nationwide aimed at getting more Hispanic families into nature and elevating their voices about the environment.
-
Wyoming and federal officials will formally kick off construction Tuesday of the massive TransWest Express transmission line project which will export wind power from Wyoming to southern California.
-
The Yampa River is full of snowmelt on its way to the Colorado River, bringing temporary relief for farms, fish and millions of people in the Southwest.
-
The Wildlife Rehabilitation Center of Northern Utah was given a notice from Ogden city to vacate by Sept. 6. Those who run the facility said it’s not enough time for them to find a new facility.
-
Deep snow has hit northern deer populations hard, but that same moisture has led southern herds to flourish.
-
In addition to ecosystem recovery, the Provo River diversion project adds a whole host of new recreation options to Utah Lake
-
The burly animals are an icon of the American West and culturally significant for many Native American tribes. They were driven to near extinction in the late 1800s.