Personnel; Employees (USFWS); Katmai National Wilderness Area; Work of the Service; Fisheries management Management; Transportation; Aircraft; Aircraft; ARLIS; Alaska
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service airplane, Grumman Goose NC 709, servicing stream guard Art Freeman. Enforcement agent Roy Lindsley (left) and Mr. Freeman (right)."
ALASKA MARITIME NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE; AMNWR; Birds; birding; Marine birds ; rats; habitat; Coastal environments; biology. Rat prevention
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist Jeff Williams and Art Sowls at a high point on Rat Island in the Aleutians Photo taken Sept. 2001 by Gred Howald
Mammals; Work of the Service; Employees (USFWS); Personnel; Monitoring; Radio telemetry
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologists Mike Jimenez (left) and Ed Bangs (right) take blood samples from a tranquilized wolf after fitting it with a radio collar during collaring operations in Yellowstone National Park May 2003. Higher resolution...
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service crews routinely burn overgrown brush (hazardous fuels) to lessen the chance of catastrophic fire. Prescribed fire mimics historic fire regimes.
Prescribed burning; Fire management; Employees (USFWS); Wildlife refuges
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service fire specialist Josh Anderson uses a drip torch to ignite a prescibed burn at Balcones National Wildlife Refuge in Texas as Lucien Ball holds the fireline with an ATV and sprayer.
Fires; Habitat restoration; Grasslands; Wildlife refuges; Prescribed burning; Fire management;
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service firefighter Matt Whitbeck wields a drip torch during a prairie restoration burn in 2000 at Anahuac National Wildlife Refuge in Texas.
Fishes; Fisheries management; Resource management; Green Lake National Fishes Hatchery; Maine; electronic
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Green Lake National Fish Hatchery, Ellsworth, Maine (Hancock County) Nikon Coolpix990 digital camera (3.34 megapixels) with a SanDisk CompactFlash memory card, JPEG