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Dan Frisk Named New Project Leader at Crab Orchard Refuge in Southern Illinois
Midwest Region, June 8, 2004
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Dan Frisk, a five-year veteran of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, has been named project leader for Crab Orchard National Wildlife Refuge in southern Illinois, the Service announced June 8. Frisk, currently the project leader at Ottawa National Wildlife Refuge in northwest Ohio, will begin his new assignment July 25, 2004.

As project leader, Frisk will supervise a staff of 26 and work cooperatively with local governments, area landowners, businesses, and private groups to develop and manage the 43,500-acre wildlife refuge. "Crab Orchard is a multi-faceted refuge with day-to-day operations that involve diverse elements of the local community,? Frisk said. ?I?m looking forward to joining a great staff of refuge professionals and building on the good work that's been accomplished there.?

Frisk, 46, has worked in wildlife related positions for the past 15 years. Before his assignment to Ottawa NWR in 2001, he served for two years as project leader at Pee Dee NWR in North Carolina. Prior to joining the Service, he served six years as an endangered species biologist for the U.S. Army at Fort Bragg, NC. A former Army officer, Frisk also taught ROTC courses at Murray State University, Murray, Ky. A married father of two, Frisk earned a bachelor's degree in Zoology from Northern Michigan University in 1981, and a master's degree in Biology from Murray State University, Murray, Ky., in 1992. Crab Orchard National Wildlife Refuge is home to 245 species of birds. Thirty-four species of mammals, 45 species of amphibians and reptiles and 52 species of fish. It is also a major wintering area for Canada geese. The refuge was established by Congress in 1947 on land formerly operated by the U.S. War Department to produce ammunition during World War Two. Unlike most refuges which are created primarily for wildlife conservation, Congress designated Crab Orchard as a ?mixed use? refuge, managed for four broad objectives: wildlife management, agricultural development, recreation and light industry. The refuge's wide spectrum of public use opportunities attracts more than one million visitors annually. Twenty-two thousand acres are designated a wildlife sanctuary and are closed to the public.

Contact Info: Midwest Region Public Affairs, 612-713-5313, charles_traxler@fws.gov



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