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Colorado Parks and Wildlife has confirmed plans to begin treating part of the Colorado River for invasive zebra mussels. The ...
Zebra mussels are similar to another invasive mollusk, the quagga mussel, which has not been detected in Colorado’s lakes and ...
State officials may have solved the puzzle of how zebra mussels got into the Colorado River.
Discoveries of the invasive and damaging zebra mussels have been piling up in Western Colorado, with recent detections in ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife (CPW) and a private landowner are partnering to contain and treat invasive zebra mussels in a ...
Keegan Lund, an aquatic invasive species specialist with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, holds up the shell of ...
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 ...
Colorado officials are asking for the public's help in preventing the spread of the aggressive and destructive species known as the zebra mussel. The post ‘Devastating’: Invasive Zebra Mussels ...
According to the Post Independent, Colorado Parks and Wildlife found the lone mussel larvae — called a "veliger" — along the river near the town of New Castle in June.
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.