History; Work of the Service; Personnel; Employees (USFWS); Partnerships; Tagging; Monitoring; Radio telemetry;
Black and white image of two men leaning over a tranquilized brown bear with radio telemetry devise during tagging and monitoring of bear population in Alaska. NOTE: Alaska Research Library and Information Service (ARLIS)
David L. Spencer oral history interview with Jim King. Please note: Dave passed away February 9, 2000, before these tapes were transcribed and he had the opportunity to edit the draft.
medical exam on a tranquilized gray wolf. Part of the effort to rebuild self-sustaining populations of gray wolves in the United States so the species can be removed from the endangered species list.
The tranquilized panther is banded for research purposes by FWS personnel. The Florida Panther is one of the most endangered mammals on earth. Only 30 to 50 adults are believed to survive in the wild, in a habitat that has been diminishing for...
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...
Yellowstone National Park wolf project leader Dr. Doug Smith checks the new radio collar on a tranquilized wolf during collaring operations in Yellowstone on 1-09-03. Higher resolution of this image not available.