When the explorers first set foot upon the continent of North America, the skies and marshes and lands teemed with an astonishing variety of wildlife. Beginning with those early settlers and continuing today, the vast majority of our natural...
Wildlife Biologist James Harris, Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Biologist and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Contaminants biologist discover a dead bird found on the shore of Breton National Wildlife Refuge.
Wildlife fact sheet about brown pelicans. The brown pelican, also called American brown pelican or common pelican, inhabits the Atlantic, Pacific, and Gulf Coasts of North and South America.
Willard (Bill )E. Nelson oral history interview as conducted by Jerry Grover. Worked in following locations in Oregon in either the field or in the office: Bend, Portland, Coos Bay, Vanport, Columbia River, Klamath River. Also spent some time in...
History; Biography; Biologists (USFWS); Aviation; Planning; Research; Work of the Service; Directors (USFWS); Employees (USFWS); Management; Personnel; Public policies;
William (Bill) Henry Meyer oral history interview as conducted by Jerry Grover.
William Finley and Herman Bohlman getting ready for a boat trip at Tule lake, Klamath Marsh, in 1905. Klamath would later become a bird refuge in 1908 due to photographs taken by Finley and Bohlman of the area in 1905.
William Finley at Klamath Marsh, 1905. Due to Finley and Bohlman's photography of the area in 1905, Klamath was named a bird refuge in 1908. "Here lay the land of my dreams. After nearly 20 years of waiting, I was looking out over this place...
Birds; History; Fishing; Fishes; Recreation; Rivers and streams; Wildlife refuges;
William Finley examining his catch at Klamath Marsh during a 1905 photography trip with his partner Herman Bohlman. Finley and Bohlman's photographs of the area in 1905 would later help Klamath become a bird refuge in 1908.
William Finley taking notes at a campsite in Klamath Marsh during a 1905 photography trip to the area with his partner Herman Bohlman that would later help Klamath become a bird refuge in 1905.
William Finley viewing the wildlife at Klamath Marsh during a 1903 photography trip taken with his partner Herman Bohlman. Finley and Bohlman's photographs of the area in 1903 would later help Klamath become a bird refuge in 1905.