"January 2008.", Includes bibliographical references., Plan representatives: Bureau of Land Management, Colorado Division of Wildlife, Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Forest Service, and United States Fish and Wildlife Service.
"January 2008.", Includes bibliographical references., Plan representatives: Bureau of Land Management, Colorado Division of Wildlife, Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Forest Service, and United States Fish and Wildlife Service.
"January 2008.", Includes bibliographical references., Plan representatives: Bureau of Land Management, Colorado Division of Wildlife, Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Forest Service, and United States Fish and Wildlife Service.
"January 2008.", Includes bibliographical references., Plan representatives: Bureau of Land Management, Colorado Division of Wildlife, Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Forest Service, and United States Fish and Wildlife Service.
"January 2008.", Includes bibliographical references., Plan representatives: Bureau of Land Management, Colorado Division of Wildlife, Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Forest Service, and United States Fish and Wildlife Service.
"January 2008.", Includes bibliographical references., Plan representatives: Bureau of Land Management, Colorado Division of Wildlife, Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Forest Service, and United States Fish and Wildlife Service.
"January 2008.", Includes bibliographical references., Plan representatives: Bureau of Land Management, Colorado Division of Wildlife, Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Forest Service, and United States Fish and Wildlife Service.
"January 2008.", Includes bibliographical references., Plan representatives: Bureau of Land Management, Colorado Division of Wildlife, Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Forest Service, and United States Fish and Wildlife Service.
"January 2008.", Includes bibliographical references., Plan representatives: Bureau of Land Management, Colorado Division of Wildlife, Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Forest Service, and United States Fish and Wildlife Service.
"January 2008.", Includes bibliographical references., Plan representatives: Bureau of Land Management, Colorado Division of Wildlife, Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Forest Service, and United States Fish and Wildlife Service.
"January 2008.", Includes bibliographical references., Plan representatives: Bureau of Land Management, Colorado Division of Wildlife, Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Forest Service, and United States Fish and Wildlife Service.
"January 2008.", Includes bibliographical references., Plan representatives: Bureau of Land Management, Colorado Division of Wildlife, Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Forest Service, and United States Fish and Wildlife Service.
This Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP) proposal describes a cooperative program that focuses on providing permanent cover for wildlife while maintaining environmentally friendly wheat fallow farming over a larger area, and adding economic stability to producers within the region. This concept uses multiple federal and state programs to address a variety of resource concerns, while maintaining the agriculturally based viability of the region. The CREP and state cost-shares and state incentives would provide for the establishment of permanent cover, while the Delayed Minimum Tillage (DMT) would be used for management purposes on adjacent acres - thereby increasing the area of environmental benefit beyond the CREP acres. Reducing herbicide use, maintaining adequate amounts of permanent and residual cover for habitat, improving water quality, preventing soil erosion and providing public access would be the main objectives of the CREP., prepared by the State of Colorado, lead author Ed Gorman., "Project Counties: Sedgwick, Phillips, Logan, Yuma, and Kit Carson Counties, (addition of Morgan, Washington, Cheyenne, Prowers, Baca, and Kiowa Counties subject to amendment and CRP acre availability)", "September 20, 2005.", Online resource; title from PDF cover (viewed June 2017)
Tutorial on how to use the Colorado hunting atlas mapping application is provided to hunters as a virtual scouting tool., video file MPEG 70.5MB, Introduction (7:9 minutes) -- Map navigation (2:07 minutes) -- Finding places (3:29 minutes) -- Map layers (2:53 minutes) -- Printing (1:57 minutes) -- Draw, label, & measure (2:54 minutes) -- Hunter resource report., Produced by Colorado Parks and Wildlife., Online resource; title from PDF website (viewed October 2020)
Tutorial on how to use the Colorado hunting atlas mapping application is provided to hunters as a virtual scouting tool., video file MPEG 70.5MB, Introduction (7:9 minutes) -- Map navigation (2:07 minutes) -- Finding places (3:29 minutes) -- Map layers (2:53 minutes) -- Printing (1:57 minutes) -- Draw, label, & measure (2:54 minutes) -- Hunter resource report., Produced by Colorado Parks and Wildlife., Online resource; title from PDF website (viewed October 2020)
Selected chapters prepared by staff members of the Colorado Division of Disaster Emergency Services and University of Colorado Center for Community Development and Design., Includes bibliographical references., Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Ninety-six animals have been released in Colorado since the first release on Feb. 3, 1999 under 5 release protocols, which were sequential adaptations that were successful in improving the survival of released animals. Future plans for the next calendar year include initiate a state recovery plan process for Canada lynx and initiate a snowshoe hare ecology study., PDF cover title., "December 22, 2000.", Mode of access: World Wide Web; file viewd August 15, 2006., Includes bibliographic references.
The CDOW has completed four of the seven criteria for establishing a viable population of lynx in Colorado., PDF caption title., "December 2002.", Mode of access: World Wide Web; file viewd August 15, 2006.
This map describes the geologic conditions where near-surface evaporite rocks occur in Colorado and the general description and hazard potential of ground subsidence that can occur from rock dissolution in evaporite terrain. This map was created as part of CGS' ongoing mission to inform the public about potential geologic hazards in Colorado, as well as a guide for land-use planning and engineering staff in municipal and county governments whose boundaries lie within near-surface evaporite rock terrain., by Jonathan L. White., Relief shown pictorially., Map discussion booklet: 24 pages : Illustrated (some color), Bibliography: pages 21-24.