For the past 18 months, the National Wildlife Refuge System has worked to create a vision that will guide the management of the Refuge System during the next decade and beyond. Conserving the Future is built on the foundation and inspiration of...
This document fulfills the requirements of Section 10 and 16 of the North American Wetlands Conservation Act of 1989. It is a biennial assessment of (A) the estimated number of acres of wetlands and habitat for waterfowl and other migratory birds...
This classification, to be used in a new inventory of wetlands and deepwater habitats of the United
States, is intended to describe ecological tax, arrange them in a system useful to resource managers,
furnish units for mapping, and provide...
Conservation Science Webinar Series - Presented by Dr. Gordon Holtgrieve and Dr. Daniel Schindler, University of Washington, and Patrick Walsh, Togiak National Wildlife Refuge. November 13, 2012.
Videography;u.s. fish and wildlife service;fishes;wildlife refuges;
Set amidst towering mountains adorned with glaciers and rocky cliffs rising majestically from the Bering Sea...all wrapped in a colorful blanket of spruce forest, wildflowers and wild open tundra....
Videography;u.s. fish and wildlife service;Environmental Education;wildlife management;wildlife refuges;recreation;
Islands of the Marsh. The Refuge was established by Congress in 1972. When acquisition is complete, it will consist of 1,200 acres of varied habitat, including the largest freshwater tidal marsh in the state of Pennsylvania.
This is the first program in the Human Dimensions of Natural Resource Conservation series. Presenters: Nancy Milar, Texas Convention & Visitors Bureau; Ted Eubanks, Fermata; Toni Westland, FWS. February 2, 2012
Attendees volunteered to participate in an interview by giving their experiences during the workshop that shows the perspectives of individuals and teams while attending th Structured Decision Making process. Feb 6-10, 2012 at NCTC.
Presented by Christopher Horsch, USFWS. February 2010. - This presentation draws from the work done by others, notably Dr. Richard Wolfson, Middlebury College, the late Dr. Stephen Schneider, Stanford University, and Dr. Stephen Miller, USFWS.
It takes lots of different jobs to run a national wildlife refuge! Chelsea Corcoran/Quadt demonstrates how to conduct a lesson plan where children explore the career of a wildlife biologist by participating in a hands-on bird mist netting...
The Shorebird Sister Schools Program presents an activity that explores the impacts of the Deepwater Horizon
Gulf Oil Spill on coastal birds and the work of many dedicated professionals helping in species recovery, with a
focus on career...
This is a report on wetlands growth in the conterminous United States between 1998-2004. It offers information on growth only; wetland quality is not explored in this report.
Military; Biography; History; Employees (USFWS); Youth; Recreation; Management; Hiking; Wilderness; Work of the Service; Wildlife refuges; Public access; Planning;
John Kurtz oral history transcript as conducted by Norman Olson. John Kurtz also spent time in the Phoenix Area Office in charge of refuges in Arizona and New Mexico. He also worked as supervisor for the northern refuges in Alaska.