Open Spaces

That's a Wrap - Friday, September 14

Welcome to That's a Wrap, a weekly round up of what's been going on in and around the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service! Every Friday, we'll supply you with the best news and info you'll need before heading out the door for the weekend.

And now, a disclaimer! We can't gather all of these lovely tidbits ourselves, so some of our links will take you away from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife website. We will never knowingly link to anything malicious, but we are obliged to tell you to be careful out there.

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What's Up with the National Wildlife Refuge System?

There is a lot of news about our National Wildlife Refuge System this week!

bison(Bison graze on the prairie at Neal Smith National Wildlife Refuge in Iowa. Photo: USFWS)

Rise in Activity

For instance, did you know that participation in wildlife-associated recreation has increased in 28 states since 2006?

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Urban Refuges in Action

By Kim Strassburg, USFWS

What, exactly, happens at an urban refuge?

The idea might come across initially as an oxymoron to some, but that is far from the truth.

Tualatin River National Wildlife Refuge is located in Portland, Oregon, and serves as an excellent example of a place where even a city-sized community can engage with nature in a meaningful way.

While a group of 8 to 10-year-olds work on nature photography, Portland Community College conservation biology students explore the refuge trails and interact with staff to learn about wildlife management and conservation careers.

StudenstonrefugeStudents expolore the Refuge. (Photo: USFWS)

While pre-school groups make crafts in the Discovery Classroom and walk the trails, teens from a North Portland Youth Employment Institute program explore the Refuge with a volunteer naturalist.

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That's a Wrap - Friday, September 7

Welcome to That's a Wrap, a weekly round up of what's been going on in and around the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service! Every Friday, we'll supply you with the best news and info you'll need before heading out the door for the weekend.

And now, a disclaimer! We can't gather all of these lovely tidbits ourselves, so some of our links will take you away from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife website. We will never knowingly link to anything malicious, but we are obliged to tell you to be careful out there.

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Meet the Species: Rare Plant Needs Your Help

Meet one of the rarest plants in the country.

The Franciscan manzanita (Arctostaphylos franciscana) is an incredibly uncommon species of shrub that grows in and around San Francisco and was just given protection under the Endangered Species Act.

rare-plant
(Photo: Sarah Swenty/USFWS)

Once believed exctinct, the last known wild Franciscan manzanita was discovered in 2009 during a road renovation project and moved for protection.

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Looking Back: Chandler Robbins

Every so often it's good to look into the past to revisit the people who got us where we are today. 'Looking Back' is a series on the people who helped shape the National Wildlife Refuge System. The series is based on "A Look Back," a regular column written by Karen Leggett from the Refuge System Branch of Communications, which appears in each issue of the Refuge Update newsletter.

Chandler Robbins is 93 and can still be reached at his office at Patuxent Wildlife Research Center in Maryland.

robbinsChandlerChandler Robbins (Photo: Barbara Dowell/USFWS)

Hired in 1945 as a junior biologist in the bird banding office at Patuxent Research Refuge, Robbins in 1965 initiated the North American Breeding Bird Survey, one of the world’s most influential science-based surveys of bird populations.

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That's a Wrap - Friday, August 31

Welcome to That's a Wrap, a weekly round up of what's been going on in and around the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service! Every Friday, we'll supply you with the best news and info you'll need before heading out the door for the weekend.

And now, a disclaimer! We can't gather all of these lovely tidbits ourselves, so some of our links will take you away from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife website. We will never knowingly link to anything malicious, but we are obliged to tell you to be careful out there.

[More]

United States Partners with Russia for Polar Bear Conservation

A recently signed agreement brings together the U.S. and Russian governments and subsistence hunters in Alaska and Chukotka, Russia, to coordinate management of the iconic polar bear.

While the Marine Mammal Protection Act was enacted to protect and conserve marine mammals including polar bears, the law also recognizes the intrinsic role that marine mammals have played and continue to play in the subsistence, cultural and economic lives of Alaska Natives.

The new agreement works to balance the needs of Alaska Natives and native people of the Russian Far East with conservation and management requirements for the polar bear.

polar-bearA polar bear at Barter Island in Alaska. (Photo: Christopher Putnam/USFWS)

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That's a Wrap - Friday, August 24

Welcome to That's a Wrap, a weekly round up of what's been going on in and around the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service! Every Friday, we'll supply you with the best news and info you'll need before heading out the door for the weekend.

And now, a disclaimer! We can't gather all of these lovely tidbits ourselves, so some of our links will take you away from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife website. We will never knowingly link to anything malicious, but we are obliged to tell you to be careful out there.

[More]

Wilderness Act Preserves Where the Wild Things Are

Back in 1964, some forward-thinking folks realized that “wild life” doesn’t just mean plants and animals. It also means the land that this country and its plants and animals have called home for hundreds of years.

With that in mind, Congress passed, and President Lyndon Johnson signed on Sept. 3, 1964, the Wilderness Act to protect some of the country’s wild lands, making the United States the first country to conserve wilderness areas through law.

wildernessEsetuk glacier, Mollie Beattie Wilderness, Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. (Photo: wilderness.net)

Our Deputy Director, Rowan Gould, is signing a Memorandum of Understanding today acknowledging that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will take part in events to mark the Act’s 50th anniversary.

But what exactly is wilderness?

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Last updated: June 21, 2012