News

Rabbits infected with a virus that causes horn and tentacle-looking growths on their faces are being reported in Colorado.
According to the Bureau of Land Management Utah, bears have been sighted in Grandstaff Canyon and along the Colorado River, ...
Earlier this week, the internet collectively gasped and recoiled as photos went viral of rabbits in Fort Collins with ...
Wildlife officials in Colorado have confirmed a troubling rise in cases of shope papillomavirus, a rare disease causing wild ...
The cottontail rabbit papillomavirus, which alarmed some Colorado residents, cannot spread to other species and often goes ...
Though the horned rabbits aren’t a danger to humans or pets, Van Hoose advises people to keep their distance from the ...
The unsightly bunnies are infected with cottontail rabbit papillomavirus, which can cause growths that resemble warts or ...
Colorado Parks and Wildlife said the growths are caused by a virus and though unsightly pose little health risk to wild ...
Viral photos have inspired a fluffle of unflattering nicknames, including "Frankenstein bunnies," "demon rabbits" and "zombie ...
Some cottontail rabbits in Fort Collins, Colorado, have been drawing attention because they have wart-like growths on their ...
They look gnarly, but Colorado Parks and Wildlife spokesperson Kara Van Hoose said that the growths don't negatively affect ...
According to Colorado Parks and Wildlife's (CPW) website, the black growths on the rabbits' heads are due to a grimmer, more ...