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A wolverine climbing on rocks, photo courtesy of NPS

Wolverines, the largest land-dwelling members of the weasel family, once roamed across the northern tier of the United States, and as far south as New Mexico in the Rockies and southern California in the Sierra Nevada range. But after more than a century of trapping and habitat loss, wolverines in the lower 48 today exist only as small, fragmented populations in Idaho, Montana, Washington, Wyoming, and northeast Oregon.
However, there’s soon to be an effort in Colorado to help the carnivores recover in that state. The Colorado legislature has been considering legislation calling for the Colorado Parks and Wildlife Agency to move ahead with a recovery plan for wolverines. The bill is expected to face its final legislative hurdle in the coming weeks.
To discuss this initiative, we’re joined today by Megan Mueller, a conservation biologist with Rocky Mountain Wild, a non-profit advocacy organization working to bring them back, and Elaine Leslie, who was Chief of Biological Resources for the National Park Service before retiring.

0:02 National Parks Traveler introduction
0:12 Episode Intro with Kurt Repanshek
0:57 Escalante - Tim Heintz - The Sounds of Peaks, Plateaus and Canyons
1:20 Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation
1:42 Smokies Life
2:05 NPT Promo
2:45 Episode 271 - Wolverine Recovery in Colorado
45:11 Vista Verde - Tim Heintz - The Sounds of Peaks, Plateaus and Canyons
45:50 Episode Closing
46:13 Orange Tree Productions
46:45 Splitbeard Productions
46:56 National Parks Traveler footer

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