I used to spend part of the year in St. Paul, Minnesota. There, Wild 
Turkeys were a common urban / suburban sight. They were regular on the 
University of Minnesota campus, which is adjacent the Mississippi River. 
One of my favorite CBC moments, too, came with these birds -- a flock in a 
residential crabapple tree in a tiny yard.

Several years ago, I saw a Wild Turkey jaunting down the street of the 
Capitol Hill neighborhood in central Denver. Later that night, a coworker 
who happened to live in that neighborhood sent me a photo of the same bird 
in her yard. While I don't expect turkeys to soon move into to Cheesman 
Park in Denver, there seem to be increasingly frequent reports of multiple 
Wild Turkeys in the southern suburbs of Denver, in Arapahoe County. This is 
a more residential and densely populated area than where turkeys seem 
typically reported in the Denver metro area (the state parks, S. Platte 
River, and Bluff Lake). The southern suburbs have relatively small (when 
compared to the state parks), but fairly rich open spaces, preserves, and 
trail systems. It is also include communities that feature large homes and 
even larger properties. The trails, meanwhile, form fairly continuous 
corridors among many of the parks, open spaces, and preserves; several also 
lead to areas where turkeys are more common.  

This is all a long way of asking -- What suburban and urban areas in 
Colorado have Wild Turkeys that regularly appear in residential or 
commercial areas (as opposed to in large protected spaces)? (Fort Collins 
seems to, according to eBird?) Where (that is, what sort of habitats -- not 
specific locations) in those spaces do they seem to spend their time, eat, 
or nest even? What, in other words, is needed for Wild Turkeys to thrive in 
fairly residential or commercial locations in Colorado?

And does anyone have thoughts on the likelihood of Wild Turkeys moving out 
of the larger protected spaces into suburban or urbanized areas around the 
Denver metro area, if only at the edges? 

- Jared Del Rosso
Centennial, CO



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