Wildlife refuges; Work of the Service; Personnel; Coastal zone management; Coastal zone management; Ferries; Motor vehicles;
Izembek Lagoon, Applegate Cove. Bob Jones (left) and driver Cal Reeve loading Fish and Wildlife Service Jeep for lagoon crossing. They lashed two skiffs together to serve as pontoon to transport Jeep across Applegate Cove.
Muskox were reintroduced to Alaska at Nunivak Island in 1935 by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service. They are believed to survivors of the Pleistocene era and to have first come to North American from 200,000 to 90,000 years ago.
The rush darter is only found in the Tombigbee-Black Warrior drainage in Alabama. It continues to have a presence in three watersheds: the Turkey Creek watershed (Jefferson County); the Clear Creek watershed (Winston County); and the Cove Creek...
Scenics; Landscapes; Glaciers; Recreation; Camping; Southeast Alaska; Glacier Bay National Park
This image was taken just south of McBride Glacier. Doug Sanvik, the photographer, was dropped off in Goose Cove and hiked to the ridge to camp on his second night after spending his first night somewhere on the side of Red Mountain. He remembers...
ALASKA MARITIME NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE; AMNWR; Birds; birding; Marine birds ; Aleutian Islands; Aleutians; habitat; Islands; Coastal environments; field camps; work of the refuge
Habitat; Beach; Coastal environments; Work of the Service; Oil spills; Wildlife refuges; Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge; Aleutians; Unalaska
Humpback Cove and North Shore of Portage Bay, Unalaska Island. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service Response to Grounding/Oil Spill off Unalaska Background Information The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is responding to the grounding of the 738-foot
Work of the Service; Oil spills; Wildlife refuges; Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge; Aleutians; Unalaska
Humpback Cove and North Shore of Portage Bay, Unalaska Island. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service Response to Grounding/Oil Spill off Unalaska Background Information The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is responding to the grounding of the 738-foot