News

When state wildlife officials first found signs of invasive zebra mussels in a reservoir in western Colorado several years ...
The Colorado River from Glenwood Springs to the Utah border is now considered positive for zebra mussels, an invasive species known to devastate ecosystems and clog critical infrastructure.
State officials may have solved the puzzle of how zebra mussels got into the Colorado River.
Ceci Weibert first saw zebra mussels on a third grade field trip, clinging to a rock in their persistent and environmentally menacing way. Now she's knee deep, or sometimes even fully submerged ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife has confirmed plans to begin treating a body of water linked to the Colorado River for invasive ...
The future of Minnedosa Lake is on the minds of volunteers who are travelling next week to Victoria Beach and researching ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife (CPW) and a private landowner are partnering to contain and treat invasive zebra mussels in a ...
Several Colorado Democrats are using the recent detections of zebra mussels in the Colorado River to push for implementation ...
Zebra mussels population dropped in Central Texas waters — for now One lake that was able to remove the mussels, Lake Waco. In 2021, TPWD reported that the mussels had been eliminated.
Zebra mussels, an invasive species, have been found in the freezing waters of the Great Lakes and go dormant when temperatures drop below 55-degrees. The Brushy Creek MUD has found a solution to ...
"Zebra clogging mussels have the ability to latch onto really anything, any kind of substrate material, and really clog things up," Brandon Ransom, Recreation Manager for Denver Water said.
Pam Marrone has already created a product that kills Quagga and Zebra mussels. Now, her team is fine tuning it to better target Golden Mussels.