~The Natural State~......COLORADO

olena

<font color=green>Emerald Angel<br><font color=mag
Joined
May 12, 2001
State Animal

Bighorn Sheep

Ovis Canadensis
Mountain Sheep

Description A medium-size bovid. Muscular body, with thick neck. Color varies from dark brown above in northern mountains to pale tan in desert; belly, rump patch, back of legs, muzzle, and eye patch are white. Short, dark brown tail. Coat sheds in patches June–July. Ram has massive brown horns that curve up and back over ears, then down, around, and up past cheeks in C-shaped "curl"; spread to 33" (83 cm). Ewe has short, slender horns that never form more than half-curl. Juvenile has soft, woolly, creamy-fawn coat. Ht male 3'–3' 5" (90–105 cm), female 30–36" (75–90 cm); L male 5' 3"–6' 1" (1.6–1.85 m), female 4' 2"–5' 2" (1.28–1.58 m); T male 4–6" (10–15 cm), female 3 1/2–5" (9–13 cm); HF 12–220 (27.6–48.2 cm); Wt male 127–316 lb (58–143 kg), female 74–200 lb (34–91 kg).
Endangered Status The Bighorn Sheep is on the U.S. Endangered Species List. It is classified as endangered in California. Both the Peninsular Ranges population in the U.S. and a California subspecies called the Sierra Nevada Bighorn are protected under the Endangered Species Act. These animals began their decline in the mid-1800s at the time of heavy human settlement of the West. This can be attributed at least in part to degradation of their habitat due to development, road-building, water-management practices, and recreational activities. The bighorns have also been affected by disease, sometimes passed on to them by domestic sheep, and are often preyed upon by Mountain Lions and probably by domestic dogs as well. These sheep live in increasingly fragmented populations, which makes them vulnerable because a single event, such as an illness, can wipe out an entire population.
Similar Species Dall’s Sheep is white, gray, or blackish; has smaller, more slender horns, and is found farther north. Mountain Goat is white and has much smaller horns.
Breeding Breeds fall–early winter, depending upon geographical latitude; after gestation of nearly 6 months, 1 lamb born April–late June.
Habitat Semi-open, precipitous terrain with rocky slopes, ridges, and cliffs or canyons; from alpine meadow to hot desert. Grassy vegetation necessary with scattered shrubby plants; water essential in desert regions.
Range Disjunct: from s British Columbia, sw Alberta, Idaho, and Montana south to se California, Arizona, and New Mexico.
Discussion The Bighorn Sheep inhabits areas around rocky cliffs rarely disturbed by humans. It perhaps has adapted to this rather inhospitable habitat because there is a lack of competition as well as protection from predators. A good swimmer and an excellent rock climber and jumper, this animal has hooves that are hard at the outer edge and spongy in the center, providing good traction even on sheer rock. The Bighorn is active by day, feeding in early morning, midday, and evening; it lies down and chews its cud at other times and retires to bedding spots for the night. In heavily congested areas such as Yellowstone National Park, this animal has sometimes had to resort to feeding at night. The Bighorn has a home range, but not a territory. It migrates between high slopes in the summer and valleys in winter, traveling distances of 1/2 to 40 miles (.8–64 km); it also makes minor movements, depending on local conditions. Most of the year is spent on the summer range. Highly gregarious, the Bighorn lives in herds or bands, usually of about 5 to 15 animals, including ewes, lambs, yearlings, and two-year-olds; the dominant ewe is the leader. Ram bands usually number two to five. In winter, when ewe herds join, there may be as many as 100 animals, all led by an old ewe. In spring, rams band together and move to separate higher summer ranges. As the fall rutting season approaches, rams have butting contests, which increase in frequency as the season progresses. They charge each other at speeds of more than 20 mph (32 km/h), their foreheads crashing with a crack that can be heard more than a mile away, often prompting other rams to similar contests. Butting battles may continue as long as 20 hours. Horn size determines status; fights occur only between rams with horns of similar size. (A seven- or eight-year-old ram may have a full curl, with tips level with the horn bases; a few old rams exceed a full curl, but often horns are "broomed"—broken off near the tips or deliberately rubbed off on rocks when they begin to block the ram’s peripheral vision.) With nose elevated, head cocked to one side, and upper lip curled, the rutting male follows any female in heat; if more than one ram follows the same ewe, they stop occasionally for butting jousts. The species is polygamous; dominant ram does most of the courting and mating. The male moves between herds seeking females in heat. When he finds one, the female will initiate a chase, or he will kick her in an attempt to initiate a chase, which may culminate in mating. If one male tires of mating, another will replace him. Lambing areas are on the most inaccessible cliffs. A single well-developed lamb is born with a soft, woolly, light-colored coat and small horn buds; within a day, it can walk and climb nearly as well as its mother. The lamb remains hidden the first week, then follows its mother about, feeding on grasses, and is weaned at five to six months.In summer, the Bighorn feeds mainly on grasses and sedges, particularly bluegrass, wheat grass, bromes, and fescues. In winter, it feeds more on woody plants, such as willow, sage, and rabbit brush. Favored forbs are phlox, cinquefoil, and clover. Because of dry conditions, in the desert this animal feeds more on brushy plants, such as desert holly, and on various species of cactus. Like other hoofed mammals in our range, the Bighorn beds down wherever it happens to be each night. Old beds may be reused, but they are pawed out more deeply. Bedding spots are often found along ridges, but sometimes they are in caves or in sites formed by Grizzly Bears digging for ground squirrels. Bighorns respond to disturbance by (1) assuming an attention posture—standing and staring at the source; (2) assuming an alarm posture—snorting, pawing the ground, bowing their heads, or, in the presence of wolves, huddling in a tight circle, facing outward; or (3) running, if startled at close range. Life span is about 15 years. Predators include Mountain Lions, golden eagles, wolves, Coyotes, bears, Bobcats, and Lynx; on cliffs, the Bighorn easily escapes all but the first two, and the eagles attack only lambs. The Bighorn has always been prized for its meat; the horns were used by the Shoshone and Gros Ventre tribes to make powerful bows and are still prized by hunters as trophies.

sheep
 
State Grass

Blue Grama

Bouteloua gracilis (Chondrosum gracilis)

Description The numerous spikelets of this grass are arranged along one side of stalks that rise above a curly mass of very thin leaves.
Flowers: tiny, lacking petals; stamens 3; styles 2. Flowers enclosed by scales, the scales grouped into spikelets about 1/4" (6 mm) long; spikelets clustered in spikes up to 2" (5 cm) long.
Leaves: 3-6" (7.5-15 cm) long, 1/12" (2 mm) wide; smooth.
Height: 6-20" (15-50 cm).
Flower July-September.
Habitat Prairies.
Range Manitoba, Wisconsin, and Minnesota; south to Illinois, Missouri, and Texas; west beyond our range.
Discussion This is an important, drought-resistant, short grass in the mixed prairies and throughout the Great Plains and the Southwest. It can be confused with Hairy Grama Grass (B. hirsuta), which is distinguished by a sharp point extending beyond the florets. A somewhat similar but shorter species, Buffalo Grass (Buchloe dactyloides), is usually less than 6" (15 cm) high and is typical of dry, short-grass plains.


grass
 
State Tree

Blue Spruce

Picea pungens
Colorado Spruce

Description Large tree with blue-green foliage and a conical crown of stout, horizontal branches in rows.
Height: 70-100' (21-30 m).
Diameter: 1 1/2-3' (0.5-0.9 m).
Needles: evergreen; spreading on all sides of twig from very short leafstalks; 3/4-1 1/8" (2-2.8 cm) long. 4-angled, sharp-pointed, stiff; with resinous odor when crushed; dull blue-green or bluish, with whitish lines.
Bark: gray or brown; furrowed and scaly.
Twigs: yellow-brown, stout, hairless, rough, with peglike leaf bases.
Cones: 2 1/4-4" (6-10 cm) long; cylindrical, mostly stalkless, shiny light brown; cone-scales long, thin, and flexible, narrowed and irregularly toothed; paired, long-winged seeds.
Habitat Narrow bottomlands along mountain streams; often in pure stands.
Range Rocky Mountain region from S. and W. Wyoming and E. Idaho south to N. and E. Arizona and S. New Mexico; at 6000-11,000' (1829-3353 m).
Discussion Cultivated varieties of Blue Spruce include several with dramatic bluish-white and silvery-white foliage. It is a popular Christmas tree and is also used in shelterbelts.


spruce
 
State Flower

Colorado Blue Columbine

Aquilegia caerulea (Aquilegia coerulea)
Rocky Mountain Columbine
Description Several stems and many divided leaves form bush plants with beautiful white and blue flowers that tip upward at ends of stems.
Flowers: 2-3" (5-7.5 cm) wide; sepals 5, spreading, lanceolate, petal-like, pale to sky blue; petals 5, shaped like sugar scoops, generally paler than sepals or even white, extending into backward-projecting spurs 1 1/4-2" (3.1-5 cm) long; stamens many and styles, 5 protruding from center of flower.
Leaves: repeatedly divided into leaflets 1/2-1 1/4" (1.3-3.1 cm) long, about as wide, deeply cleft and lobed.
Height: to 3' (90 cm).
Flower June-August.
Habitat Mountains, commonly in aspen groves.
Range Western Montana to northern Arizona and northern New Mexico.
Discussion Colorado's state flower. Popular in cultivation, with several color phases and "doubled" flowers. Hybridization with other species has produced further cultivated variants. Phases in the wild with pale or white sepals are frequent. A species with blue sepals and white petal tips, but only 2-8" (5-20 cm) tall, is Alpine Blue Columbine (A. saximontana), whose blue spurs are hooked at the tip; it grows high in the Colorado mountains.

columbine
 
State Fish

Cutthroat Trout

Oncorhynchus clarki

Description To 30" (76 cm); 41 lbs (18.6 kg). Elongate, cylindrical or terete, moderately compressed; back dark olive; sides variable: silvery, olive, reddish to yellow-orange; belly lighter; dark spots on back, sides, and on median fins. Mouth extends beyond eye; basibranchial teeth present; bright red to red-orange slash mark on each side of throat, particularly visible in breeding males. 8-11 dorsal fin rays; 9-12 anal fin rays; adipose fin present. Caudal peduncle narrow; caudal fin slightly forked. Lateral line complete, 120-230 scales, usually 150 or more.
Endangered Status Three subspecies of the Cutthroat Trout are on the U.S. Endangered Species List. The Lahontan Cutthroat Trout is classified as threatened in California, Nevada, Oregon, and Utah. The Paiute Cutthroat Trout is classified as threatened in California. The Greenback Cutthroat Trout is classified as threatened in Colorado. The decline of these subspecies can be attributed to changes in habitat, usually caused by water-management practices but also by livestock grazing and the mining and timber industries; overfishing; and the introduction of non-native fishes which prey upon, compete with, and hybridize with the natives. A newly introduced illness called whirling disease may also develop into a major threat.
Habitat Inshore marine and estuarine waters; lakes; coastal, inland, and alpine streams.
Range From S. Alaska south to N. California; inland from S. British Columbia and Alberta south to New Mexico; E. California east to central Colorado. Introduced in W. United States.
Discussion There are more than 10 subspecies of Cutthroat Trouts, locally called "native trout," which vary in coloration and size. The largest specimen, caught in Pyramid Lake, Nevada, in 1925, weighed 41 lbs (18.6 kg), but this strain is now extinct. Other cutthroats, while rarely exceeding 15" (38 cm), are important in the inland and coastal fishery, and are sought by anglers.

trout
 
State Insect

Colorado Hairstreak

Hypaurotis crysalus

Description 1 3/8-1 1/2" (35-38 mm). Large. Above, deep purple with wide dark margins and usually a few marginal golden-orange spots on both wings; male has incomplete dark FW band, female has complete band. Both sexes below light to brownish-gray with white-edged darker line and short orange submarginal band on both wings; blue patch and black-centered orange spot on HW near tail.
Life Cycle Adults strongly associated with Gambel oak (Quercus gambelii); eggs are found on bark and caterpillars have been reared on leaves.
Flight 1 brood; June-September (mostly July-August).
Habitat Oak canyons and mountain foothills, at 5000-9000' (1525-2745 m).
Range Ne. Utah and sw. Wyoming south through e. Nevada and Colorado to se. Arizona and New Mexico; probably also Mexico.
Discussion The Colorado Hairstreak, along with the Golden Hairstreak, bears a closer relationship to Old World hairstreaks than it does to our other North American species. It is surely one of our most brilliant and exotic looking butterflies. Unlike many butterflies, this hairstreak remains active past sunset and sometimes on cloudy or even rainy days.


hairstreak
 
State Bird

Lark Bunting

Calamospiza melanocorys

Description 6-7 1/2" (15-19 cm). Breeding male black, with large white wing patch. Female, immature, and winter male streaked sandy buff above, white below, with white eye line, faint "mustache" stripe, white wing patch (not always visible), and rounded, white-tipped tail feathers.
Voice A canary-like song with loud bubbling sequences and trills interspersed with harsher notes. Call is a 2-note whistle.
Habitat Dry plains and prairies; open sagebrush.
Nesting 4 or 5 light blue eggs in a loose grass nest placed in a scrape with rim flush with the ground; often protected by weedy patch.
Range Breeds on prairies of south-central Canada and central United States. Winters in Southwest and into Mexico.
Discussion Lark Buntings are usually seen in large flocks feeding along roadsides. On the breeding grounds they are quite gregarious, several pairs crowding into a few acres of suitable habitat. Since there are few elevated song perches in their grassland breeding area, the spectacular black and white male advertises its presence with a conspicuous song flight, in which it rises almost vertically, then drops back to its original perch. Often one can see several singing males in the air at one time, providing watchers an easy way to locate a nesting colony. Like many seed-eating birds, they supplement their summer diet with insects.

lark






Previous Natural States
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Florida
Iowa
Kansas
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
New Hampshire
Ohio
Rhode Island
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Washington
West Virginia


Previous Natural Provinces
Manitoba
Ontario
Prince Edward Island
Quebec
 
I love this thread, Olena....Thanks for letting me know about it :)
 
Colorado is such a beautiful state. I love these photos, Heather :)
 

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