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Endangered Species Act


Feral Swine Removal Demonstration Project

July 24, 2013 Edward Avalos, Under Secretary for Marketing and Regulatory Programs

Recently I traveled to New Mexico to meet with APHIS-Wildlife Services’ personnel for a firsthand view of their Feral Swine Removal Demonstration Project that aims to eliminate feral swine from the state. Feral swine are an invasive species with a population that has grown from approximately 1...

Animals Plants

Forest Service Helps Restore Fish to Oregon Stream

March 26, 2013 Chris Bentley, Mt. Hood National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

After nearly a century, a five-mile stretch of the Lower Oak Grove Fork of Oregon’s Clackamas River will have native fish swimming year-round in this restored stream once again. Early in the 20th century, the growing communities around Portland needed hydroelectric power. The Oak Grove Fork dam...

Conservation Forestry

Sun Ranch Helps Protect Sage Grouse in Wyoming

March 15, 2013 Haley Lockwood, NRCS Wyoming

Dennis Sun, owner of the Sun Ranch west of Casper, Wyo. and publisher/owner of the Wyoming Livestock Roundup, is making his ranch friendlier for a small bird that he can neither sell nor hunt. That’s because he wanted to help ensure that the sage grouse doesn’t get listed as an endangered species...

Conservation

Threatened Sea Bird with a Catchy Name

March 13, 2013 Sherri Eng, Southwest Pacific Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

Marbled murrelets are not the background singers in a ‘60s band. Rather, they are a native sea bird species whose population south of Canada is declining. Like the Pacific Northwest’s iconic northern spotted owl, this small seabird’s nesting habitat may be threatened by the loss of coastal old...

Conservation Forestry

Kentucky Wetland Restoration Attracts Endangered Cranes

February 01, 2013 Ray Toor, NRCS Kentucky

A wetland restoration project completed by USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service in Kentucky has attracted the fancy of a pair of endangered whooping cranes. In early November, a pair of whooping cranes were discovered on a property in western Kentucky that was recently restoredwith NRCS’...

Conservation

Landowner and Land Manager Working to Help Lesser Prairie-Chicken

August 15, 2012 Sheila Forrester, NRCS Kansas

A Kansas family and their neighbor are working with USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) to increase habitat for the lesser prairie-chicken—while also benefiting their grazing lands. Glen Mull and his daughter, Amy Harter, collaborate with Tom Turner to co-manage the grassland they...

Conservation

Alabama’s Conecuh National Forest Helps Reestablish the Eastern Indigo Snake

April 27, 2012 Max Silvera, Public Affairs Specialist, Southern Region, and Tammy Freeman Truett, Public Affairs Officer, National Forests in Alabama

Alabama conservationists are closer to regenerating a population of the threatened eastern indigo snake in the Conecuh National Forest through the release of numerous juvenile snakes on the forest. The indigo snake is North America’s largest native snake, and plays an important ecological role in...

Forestry Animals Plants
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