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Wildlife Services


World Rabies Day

September 24, 2020 Tanya Espinosa, Public Affairs Specialist, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

Did you first learn about rabies through the children’s book or movie “Old Yeller”? Rabies has changed drastically over the last century in the United States, moving from a majority of cases occurring in domestic animals like the literary canine hero, to a disease occurring predominantly in wildlife...

Animals

USDA Wildlife Services Highlights Wildlife Damage Management Tools

April 03, 2020 Gail Keirn, APHIS Legislative and Public Affairs

Invasive rodents on islands, predators eating livestock, vultures pecking at property, birds colliding with airplanes. Wildlife damage can take many forms. As such, wildlife managers need a variety of tools to help reduce damage.

Animals Technology

10th Anniversary of the ‘Miracle on the Hudson’: USDA Research Reduces Wildlife Hazards at Airports

February 25, 2019 Gail Keirn, USDA APHIS Public Affairs Specialist

Since 2009, researchers located at the USDA-APHIS Wildlife Services’ National Wildlife Research Center have made significant discoveries directly impacting how wildlife hazards are managed at airports.

Animals

USDA and Partners Work to Eliminate Invasive Nutria From Maryland’s Eastern Shore

July 02, 2018 Tanya Espinosa, Public Affairs Specialist, APHIS

Word has it that legendary actress Greta Garbo could be seen wearing nutria fur coats back in the day, and nutria fur coats can still be found in vintage clothing stores around the world. Nutria, sometimes called swamp rats, were first introduced into the United States in the 1800s to be used in the...

Animals

Bear Proofing Your Home: Simple Fix Can Reduce Bear Conflicts

June 21, 2018 Gail Keirn, USDA APHIS Public Affairs Specialist

Like the famous cartoon character Yogi Bear, black bears are quick to take advantage of food left out by people. Black bears forage on garbage, bird seed, dog food, and other food items commonly found around homes and businesses. This has led to an increase in conflicts between bears and people in...

Animals

Sniffing Out Disease: Dogs Trained for Wildlife Disease Surveillance

June 12, 2018 Gail Keirn, USDA APHIS Public Affairs Specialist

Odin is a Labrador retriever/border collie mix. By watching his wagging tail and alert expression, Colorado State University researcher Dr. Glen Golden can sense he is eager to begin his training. Odin is one of five dogs recently adopted from shelters and animal rescue centers to become detector...

Animals

Feral Swine Eradication in Havasu National Wildlife Refuge: Protecting Endangered Species from Feral Swine Damage

April 17, 2018 Jeanine Neskey, Extension Specialist, USDA, APHIS

Havasu National Wildlife Refuge was established by Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1941, as a refuge and breeding ground for migratory birds and other wildlife. The refuge encompasses 37,515 acres of riverine, riparian, wetland, and desert upland habitats protecting one of the last remaining natural...

Animals

Wildlife Partners Unite to Protect Iconic Species from Deadly Plague

October 04, 2017 Gail Keirn, USDA APHIS Public Affairs Specialist

Last month, researchers, wildlife biologists and managers from several federal, state and local agencies gathered at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services’ (USFWS) National Black-footed Ferret Conservation Center to celebrate a breakthrough in wildlife management— the development of an oral vaccine...

Animals

Neither Rain nor Sleet nor Snow Stops Wildlife Disease Biologists from Collecting Samples

April 12, 2017 Gail Keirn, USDA APHIS Public Affairs Specialist

On a cold and blustery day, APHIS wildlife disease biologist Jared Hedelius sits in his truck by the Bighorn River in Montana and waits. Although the temperatures outside are well below freezing, the mallards on the river are busy searching for food, oblivious to Jared’s swim-in live trap just a few...

Animals

Rabies and Vampire Bats

May 04, 2016 Gail Keirn, Public Affairs Specialist, USDA, APHIS

All this month we will be taking a look at what a changing climate means to Agriculture. For APHIS, changes in environmental conditions will increase the likelihood of shifts in the distribution and nature of current domestic diseases, invasive species and agricultural pests. These changes will...

Animals Plants
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