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wildlife damage management


Alternative Uses for Fladry

December 15, 2022 Gail Keirn, Wildlife Services Communication Program Specialist, APHIS

Wildlife Services (WS) experts are exploring how fladry, a nonlethal tool used to protect cattle, sheep, and other livestock from wolves, can prevent other wildlife damage.

Animals

Becoming a Tree Climber: Training in the Trees

November 28, 2022 Merilyn Navarro Sanchez, Communications Intern, USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

For the first time ever, expert tree climbers with the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service’s (APHIS) Asian Longhorned Beetle (ALB) Eradication Program trained fellow APHIS employees from another program on how to climb trees with a purpose.

Animals

Dispersing Vultures Goes High Tech

November 16, 2021 Gail Keirn, Legislative and Public Affairs

When turkey vultures gather in large groups in urban areas, they can cause safety concerns due to their abundant fecal droppings and as hazards to air traffic. Wildlife Services (WS) biologists often manage vulture damage by modifying habitats to remove the things that attract them, such as perches...

Animals

Keeping the Wolves at Bay

August 03, 2021 Bryan Potts, Writer-Editor, APHIS Executive Communications

It’s often said that, “good fences make good neighbors.” And in Wisconsin, the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service's Wildlife Services (WS) helped a sheep producer prove that saying true again. Using funds allocated for nonlethal livestock protection, WS designed and built a fence for the...

Animals

An Airport is No Place for an Owl

February 24, 2014 Bobby Hromack, Wildlife Biologist, APHIS Wildlife Services at Pittsburgh International Airport

Seeing a short-eared owl in November on the Pittsburgh International Airport, where I work as an airport wildlife biologist, was a unique occasion. However, as the number of owls grew to eight, I recognized the challenge ahead: Like all birds of prey, short-eared owls are a recognized potential...

Animals Plants

Protecting Agriculture, One Hive at a Time

August 14, 2012 Andrew Montoney, USDA Wildlife Services Director in Ohio

When startled by a swarm of flying and buzzing insects, complete with stingers, the common response may be to grab an aerosol can of insecticide; but appreciating the vital importance of honey bees to agriculture and knowing something of various difficulties currently faced by bees, alternative...

Animals Plants

Keeping Terrapins Away from JFK

June 04, 2012 Jim Barrett, APHIS Public Affairs, Riverdale, MD

It’s been a busy spring for USDA Wildlife Services’ biologist Jenny Mastantuono and her staff, who work at John F. Kennedy (JFK) International Airport solving wildlife conflicts with people and planes.

Animals Plants

USDA Keeps Military Flying Safely in Nebraska

February 21, 2012 David Sacks, APHIS Public Affairs, Riverdale, MD

For APHIS Wildlife Services employees Marie Griffin and Steve Baumann, being recognized as “Outstanding Performers” by the U.S. Air Force’s 55 th Wing is an honor. But the most rewarding feeling comes at the end of each work day, after none of the aircraft at Nebraska’s Offutt Air Force Base incurs...

Animals Plants

Making Rabies History – World Rabies Day, September 28

September 28, 2011 Gail Keirn, APHIS Public Affairs, Fort Collins, CO

Today is World Rabies Day. Scientists, public health professionals, veterinarians, wildlife biologists, and others from around the globe will celebrate World Rabies Day by raising awareness about efforts to rid the world of rabies. Rabies is one of the oldest known diseases, yet it remains a...

Conservation Animals Plants

Wolf Monitoring with the Ho-Chunk Nation

December 17, 2010 DeWayne Snobl, USDA Wildlife Services and Karen Karash, Ho-Chunk Nation Department of Natural Resources

Wolves have an intrinsic value among Ho-Chunk people. The Nation is dedicated to ensuring that wolves remain on the landscape to preserve their role in Ho-Chunk culture for future generations.

Animals Plants
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