Work of the Service; Personnel; Employees (USFWS); Snow; History; Ice;
Paul Fischer, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service fisheries biologist, uses hand auger to bore a hole in the ice on the Tanana River so an underwater TV camera can be lowered. Art Libraries Society (ARLIS)
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 report on the National Wildlife Refuge System is the culmination
of a year-long process involving teams of Service employees who
examined the System within the framework of Wildlife and Habitat,
People, and Leadership. The report was the focus...
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.
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.
National wildlife artist Bob Hines (1912 - 1994) bird illustrations including a robin, junco, chickadees, house wren, bobolinks, brown thrasher, song sparrow; road runners, yellow-billed cuckoo, Lewis's woodpecker, ivory-billed woodpecker,...
Frank W. Sharp oral history interview with C.M. Mobley. Gabriel George is also present. Note that Mr. Sharp is not a retiree of the Fish and Wildlife Service, but was associated with the Hood Bay Cannery in Angoon, Alaska.
Oral history interview with Walter Clark and Dave Hall. The two men are talking and getting into an automobile. Doors shutting, engine ignition sounds are heard