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Wind Turbines, courtesy of flickr user "Studio Tempura"

Salazar Approves Landmark Wyoming Wind Project, Reaches President's Goal of Authorizing 10,000 Megawatts of Renewable Energy

 

Advancing President Obama's all-of-the-above strategy for expanding domestic energy resources, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar today announced that the Department has reached the President's goal of authorizing 10,000 megawatts of renewable power on public lands with the approval of the Chokecherry and Sierra Madre Wind Energy Project site as suitable for wind energy development.


Photo: Wind Turbines, courtesy of Studio Tempura

 

News Release

 

 

Common Goldeneye by Robert Steiner

California Artist Robert Steiner Wins 2012 Federal Duck Stamp Contest

 

Robert Steiner, an artist from San Francisco, Calif., is the winner of the 2012 Federal Duck Stamp Art Contest. The announcement was made today by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Deputy Director Rowan Gould at Weber State University in Ogden, Utah. Steiner's acrylic painting of a common goldeneye will be made into the 2013-2014 Federal Duck Stamp, which will go on sale in late June 2013.


Photo Caption: Image of the 2012 Federal Duck Stamp winner Robert Steiner, an artist from San Francisco, California. Credit: Robert Steiner

 

News Release | 2012 Duck Stamp Website

 

 

Elk by Edwin and Peggy Bauer / USFWS

Colorado Big Game Outfitter Convicted on Six Felony Charges

 

A Federal jury in Denver found a long-time big game outfitter guilty of six felony Lacey Act violations in connection with unlawful elk and deer hunts sold to non-resident hunters for between $1,200 and $1,600. The defendant, who faces fines of up to $250,000 and 5-year prison terms on each count, will also forfeit two ATVs and a utility trailer used in committing the crimes.

This investigation, which was conducted by the Service and Colorado Parks and Wildlife, documented the recurring use of hundreds of pounds of salt to bait elk and deer.

 

News Release

 

 

Removal of Obsolete Clifford Dam near Frederick, Maryland, last week. Credit: Conor Bell / USFWS

National Fish Passage Program Helps Restore Streams, Benefits People and Local Economies

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and community partners across the nation worked together to remove or bypass 158 dams, culverts and other structures in 2011, opening more than 2,180 miles of streams to native fish populations. These efforts, coordinated through the National Fish Passage Program, have also contributed to improved water quality, provided additional recreational and economic opportunities, and even addressed serious threats to human health and safety.

 

News Release | 2011 Report | Fish Passage Program

 

 

Bison with calf at Rocky Mountain Arsenal NWR. Photo courtesy of U.S. Army / Rich Keen, DPRA Inc.

Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge Resumes Public Visitation

 

Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge has reopened for public visitation ahead of schedule following a brief closure to allow the U.S. Army to drill eight additional monitoring wells around a former remedy project.


The Refuge's entrance gate is now open from 6:00 am to 6:00 pm, allowing public use activities to resume including catch-and-release fishing and hiking. The Visitor Center is scheduled to reopen on Saturday, September 22nd at 9:00 am.

 

News Release | RMA Website

 

 

Children Play at the Outdoor Classroom at Creston NFH. Credit: USFWS

Creston National Fish Hatchery Receives National Designation for Outdoor Classroom

 

The Creston National Fish Hatchery, located in Kalispell, MT, earned the national designation of a certified Nature Explore Classroom from the Arbor Day Foundation and Dimensions Educational Research Foundation. Creston, a unit of the Fisheries Program in the Mountain-Prairie Region, is the first facility to receive the celebrated certification in the state of Montana.

 

The historic hatchery serves as a national outdoor classroom model for others throughout the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

 

Story | Creston NFH Site

 

The sun sets on the Sangre de Cristo Mountains at Monte Vista National Wildlife Refuge in the San Luis Valley in southern Colorado.  Credit: USFWS

Salazar Establishes 558th National Wildlife Refuge in Colorado's Sangre de Cristo Mountains

 

Secretary of Interior Ken Salazar today announced the formal establishment of the Sangre de Cristo Conservation Area as the nation's 558th unit of the National Wildlife Refuge System, thanks to the donation of a nearly 77,000-acre conservation easement in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains bordering the San Luis Valley by noted conservationist Louis Bacon.


“Following in the footsteps of our greatest conservationists, Louis Bacon’s generosity and passion for the great outdoors is helping us to establish an extraordinary conservation area in one of our nation’s most beautiful places,” Secretary Salazar said.

 

News Release | Fact Sheet | Map

 

 

Kayaking is one of many recreational opportunities provided by National Wildlife Refuges

Visit Your National Wildlife Refuges: October 14-20, 2012

 

Treat yourself with a visit to a national wildlife refuge during National Wildlife Refuge Week, from October 14-20. Celebrate America's wildlife heritage, and see what wildlife refuges are doing to conserve it.


Visitors to refuges like what they find there, according to a study this year by the U.S. Geological Survey. About 90 percent of the survey’s 10,000 adult participants reported satisfaction with refuge recreation, information and education, public service and conservation. “Nowhere else do I feel such a deep sense of connection with the land, the plants, and the wildlife,” offered one respondent. “Visiting a refuge is truly a spiritual experience.”

 

News Release | Event Calendar | The Big Sit!

 

 

Black-footed ferret kits. Credit: Kimberly Tamkun / USFWS

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Invites the Public to "Follow the Ferret"

 

The National Black-Footed Ferret Recovery Program, a multi-partner project lead by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, invites the public to follow the life-cycle of one of North America's most endangered mammals, the black-footed ferret.

 

Starting this week, the public can follow a number of black-footed ferrets on the Recovery Program's Facebook page as biologists work to prepare them to survive on the American prairie.

 

News Release | Facebook Page | Recovery Program Web page

 

 

Northern Rocky Mountain Gray Wolf. Credit: USFWS

Service Declares Wyoming Gray Wolf Recovered and Returns Management Authority to State

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced today that the Wyoming population of gray wolves is recovered and no longer warrants protection under the Endangered Species Act.  Beginning September 30th, wolves in Wyoming will be managed by the state under an approved management plan, as they are in the states of Idaho and Montana.

 

"The return of the wolf to the Northern Rocky Mountains is a major success story, and reflects the remarkable work of States, Tribes, and our many partners to bring this iconic species back from the brink of extinction," said Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe.

 

 

News Release | Learn More | Story | Federal Register Notice

 

 

Platte River Caddisfly (Ironoquia plattensis), a rare insect being considered for Endangered Species protection, photographed in a slough near Central City, Hamilton County, Nebraska. Credit: Eric Fowler, NEBRASKAland Magazine / Nebraska Game and Parks

Platte River Caddisfly Not Warranted for Endangered Species Protection

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced that the Platte River caddisfly, a small, moth-like insect found in backwaters along rivers in Nebraska, is not warranted for protection under the Endangered Species Act. We have completed a comprehensive status review, known as a 12-month finding, and determined that there is sufficient scientific and commercial data to demonstrate that the Platte River caddisfly is secure throughout its range. If information becomes available in the future to indicate that the species is in decline and threatened with extinction, we will conduct an assessment on the status of the caddisfly at that time.

 

News Release | Learn More | Q & A | ESA Success Story

 

 

Rocky Mountain Monkeyflower. Photo by Steve Olsen / U.S. Forest Service

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to Review Status of Rocky Mountain Monkeyflower

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service evaluated a petition requesting the listing of the Rocky Mountain monkeyflower (Mimulus gemmiparus) under the Endangered Species Act. We determined that a more in-depth examination of the status of the species is justified. The agency will conduct a full status review of the species, and once the review is complete, determine whether to propose adding the species to the Federal lists of endangered or threatened wildlife and plants.

 

News Release | Learn More

 

 

Male sage-grouse on a lek in Butte County, SD. Credit: Steve Fairbairn / USFWS

FWS Releases Draft Report to Help Guide Sage-Grouse Conservation Objectives

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is making available a draft report that is designed to help guide the efforts of the States and other partners to conserve the greater sage-grouse with a landscape level strategy that will benefit the species while maintaining a robust economy in the West. The report, prepared by state and federal scientists and sage-grouse experts, identifies the conservation status of the sage-grouse, the nature of the threats facing the species, and objectives to ensure its long-term conservation.

 

News Release | Draft Report | Fact Sheet

 

 

WSFR 75th Anniversary Logo

Service Awards $5.7 Million to State Fish and Wildlife Agencies to Conserve Imperiled Species

 

The U.S Fish and Wildlife Service today announced more than $5.7 million in grants to seven state fish and wildlife agencies to conserve and recover imperiled species and their habitats through the State Wildlife Grants Competitive Program. States and their partners will match federal funding with more than $4.6 million in non-federal funds.

 

 

 

News Release | Learn More

 

 

Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar (left) and CO Governor John Hickenlooper sign the historic agreement to implement the Rocky Mountain Greenway Project. Credit: Tami Heilemann / DOI

Secretary Salazar, Governor Hickenlooper Applaud Rocky Mountain Greenway Efforts

 

Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar and Governor John Hickenlooper of Colorado today commended the members of the newly-established Rocky Mountain Greenway Steering Committee for their early leadership in moving forward President Obama's America's Great Outdoors initiative in the Front Range and metropolitan Denver region. The vision for the Rocky Mountain Greenway project is to create uninterrupted trails and transportation linkages connecting the Denver metro area's trail systems, the three Denver-area units of the National Wildlife Refuge System, Rocky Mountain National Park, and the community trails systems in between.

 

News Release | Learn More

 

 

Golden Eagle. Credit: George Gentry / USFWS

Poacher Sentenced for Illegal Killing of Eagle in Kansas

 

The poacher of a golden eagle in Trego County, Kansas, was sentenced August 22 after pleading guilty to killing the immature raptor in 2011. Chad Irvin, of Lacrosse, Kan., pleaded guilty to one misdemeanor count of the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act; was ordered to pay a fine of $5,000 and restitution of $3,000; placed on supervised probation for a period of three years during which time he may not hunt, fish or trap; required to complete 50 hours of community service; and ordered to forfeit the shotgun used to kill the eagle.

 

News Release | Learn More

 

 

Horsethief Ponds Overlook. Mike Porras, Colorado Parks & Wildlife

Construction Complete on Endangered Fish Grow-out Ponds

 

The Bureau of Reclamation announced today that construction is complete on grow-out ponds at the Horsethief Canyon Native Fish Facility located just outside of Fruita, Colo. The facilities are part of the Upper Colorado River Endangered Fish Recovery Program and the San Juan River Basin Recovery Implementation Program.

 

 

 

 

News Release

 

 

The Partners for Fish and Wildlife program assists landowners with projects that benefit Federal Trust Species while also improving their overall ranching and farming operations.  Credit: USFWS

Partners for Fish and Wildlife Celebrates its 25th Anniversary

 

For the past 25 years, the Fish and Wildlife Services' Partners for Fish and Wildlife Program has been working with private landowners and organizations to restore, protect and enhance important wildlife habitats on private lands. The Mountain-Prairie Region's Partners for Fish and Wildlife (PFW) program began in 1987 and includes Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Kansas, and Nebraska. It was born in the prairie pothole region of the Midwest and is closely linked to the National Wildlife Refuge (Refuge) system.

 

 

News Release | Project Profiles | Learn More

 

 

Columbia River training site near Portland, Oregon (Mount Hood in the background) where members of the R6 Dive Team attended a USGS course, Procedures for Conducting Underwater Searches for Invasive Mussels.  Photo: Larry Lockard /  USFWS

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Scuba Dive Team Trains for Invasive Mussel Searches

 

Four members of the Mountain-Prairie Region of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) Dive Team recently completed training in the Columbia River at a U.S Geological Survey course, Procedures for Conducting Underwater Searches for Invasive Mussels.The course was sponsored under the 100th Meridian Initiative which funds activities to prevent the spread of invasive mussels. Members of the Dive Team are highly trained volunteer scuba divers from the Service's Refuges, Fisheries, and Ecological Services programs.

 

 

Learn More

 

 

Greg Neudecker Receives the Ira Gabrielson Conservation Leadership Award. Credit: Ryan Haggerty / USFWS

Greg Neudecker Receives the Ira Gabrielson Conservation Leadership Award

 

Graduates of Cohort X of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Advanced Leadership Development Program selected Greg Neudecker to receive the Ira Gabrielson Conservation Leadership Award for 2012. The award, established in 2002 by the first ALDP graduating class, is to recognize an outstanding Service employee making a significant contribution to conservation and reflects the powerful commitment and leadership qualities of Dr. Gabrielson who served as the first Director of the Fish and Wildlife Service.

 

Learn More

 

 

Recreation.gov Logo

Recreation.gov Redesign: Engaging Visitors with the Great Outdoors

 

With a few weeks of summer weather left, there is still plenty of time to explore the great outdoors. There are few better places to do that than in America’s national parks, wildlife refuges, waterways, and forests. A new and improved Recreation.gov website is the perfect tool to plan your family’s next adventure.

With improved navigation tools and more in-depth content, Recreation.gov showcases 90,000 federal sites and healthy outdoor spaces to consider.

 

 

Announcement | Recreation.gov

 

 

Section 6 funding protects lands that support a diverse mosaic of habitat types and serve as important wildlife corridors for many listed species, such as the endangered Kirtland's warbler. Credit: Joel Trick / USFWS

Service Announces $33 Million in Grants to Support Endangered Species

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service today announced nearly $33 million in grants to 21 states to support conservation planning and acquisition of vital habitat for threatened and endangered fish, wildlife and plants. The grants, awarded through the Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund, under Section 6 of the Endangered Species Act, will benefit numerous species, ranging from the Peninsular bighorn sheep to Kirtland's warbler.

 

 

News Release | Fact Sheet | Learn More

 

 

bull elk credit: Lori Iverson / USFWS

National Elk Refuge Celebrates 100 Years of Conservation Success

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is pleased to announce an exciting line-up of programs scheduled for Friday, August 10 through Sunday, August 12 to celebrate and honor the National Elk Refuge’s 100-year history. The weekend centennial celebration dates were selected to coincide with the historic date of August 10, 1912 when an Act of Congress set aside lands “for the establishment of a winter game (elk) reserve..."

 

Read More

 

 

 

Penstemon debilis Credit: Creed Clayton / USFWS

Service Recognizes Voluntary Conservation Efforts in Designation of Critical Habitat for Three Rare Colorado Plants

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced today that based on feedback and input from the State of Colorado, the oil and gas industry, and the public, it has refined and narrowed the final rule to designate critical habitat for three rare western Colorado plants: the Pagosa skyrocket (Ipomopsis polyantha), Parachute beardtongue (Penstemon debilis), and DeBeque phacelia (Phacelia submutica).

 

Read More | Learn More | Questions and Answers | Pagosa Skyrocket Fact Sheet

 

 

Utah Prairie Dog. Credit: USFWS

Service Finalizes New Rules Regarding Take Allowances for the Utah Prairie Dog

 

Today, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service notified the public of our final changes to a special rule for the Utah prairie dog (Cynomys parvidens) governing take for the species. Our amendment to the existing special rule establishes clarifications for direct take of prairie dogs including: where permitted take can occur; the amount of take that can be permitted; and methods of take that can be permitted.

 

 

 

News Release | Final Rule | Letter to the Editor

 

 

Deer at Denver's Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge. Photo Courtesy of U.S. Army / Rich Keen, DPRA

Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge to Temporarily Close for Public Visitation

 

The Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge and Visitor Center will be closed to all public activities and visitation beginning Monday, August 20 through Friday, September 21, 2012 to support the expansion of a monitoring project on U.S. Army-owned land located in the central portion of the site.

 

 

 

 

Media Advisory | Learn More

 

 

Sunset over the Sangre de Cristo Mountains

Draft San Luis Valley HCP and Environmental Assessment to be Released July 2012

 

The Rio Grande Water Conservation District (District) and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) are notifying the public that the Draft San Luis Valley Regional Habitat Conservation Plan and Environmental Assessment (Draft HCP/EA) will be released in July 2012 for a 60-day public review period.  The availability of documents, public review period, and contact information will be announced in the Federal Register on July 25, 2012. 

 

 

 

Press Release | Draft HCP/EA | SLV Photos

 

 

Southwestern willow flycatcher. Credit: Jim Rorabaugh / USFWS

Comments Sought for Southwestern Willow Flycatcher Critical Habitat

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has reopened of the public comment period for its August 2011 proposal to revise critical habitat for the endangered southwestern willow flycatcher.  We're also announcing the availability of a draft economic analysis of the proposed critical habitat, a public hearing, additional areas that we are considering to exclude from the designation and two newly proposed areas (Cienega Creek area of southern Arizona).

 

 

Press Release | Learn More

 

 

Cluster of hibernating healthy Virginia big-eared bats in Pendleton County, WV. Credit: Craig Stihler, WVDNR

USFWS Awards Grants to 30 States for White-Nose Syndrome Work

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) today announced grant awards totaling $962,981 to thirty states for white-nose syndrome (WNS) projects. State natural resource agencies will use the funds for surveillance and monitoring of caves and mines where bats hibernate, preparing state response plans and other related projects. The Service is leading a cooperative effort with federal and state agencies, tribes, researchers, universities and other non-government organizations to research and manage the spread of WNS.

 

 

Press Release | Whitenosesyndrome.org

 

 

Rocky Mountain Arsenal NWR Amphitheatre. Photo: USFWS

Amphitheater Construction Project at Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge Complete

 

Thanks to the work of a Mountain-Prairie Region Refuge Maintenance Action Team, a new amphitheater was recently erected adjacent to the Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge's visitor center in Commerce City, Colo.

 

 

Learn More | Photos

 

 

 

 

2012 Federal Duck Stamp

2012-2013 Federal Duck Stamps Now On Sale, Offer Easy Way to Protect Wetland Habitat

 

The 2012-2013 Federal Duck Stamp went on sale today across the United States, giving hunters, stamp collectors and anyone who cares about migratory birds and other wildlife an easy way to help conserve their habitat. Ninety-eight percent of proceeds from sales of the stamp are used to acquire and protect vital wetlands supports hundreds of species of migratory birds, wildlife and plants. 

 

 

Press Release | Buy Your Duck Stamps!

 

 

Student Conservation Association (SCA) Internship Leads to Impactful Summer for Arizona College Student

USFWS Internship Leads to Impactful Summer for Tribal College Student

 

Valentina Vavages, a student at Tohono O'odham Community College in Arizona, spent 13 weeks participating in a Tribal Intern Program at Ouray National Wildlife Refuge in Randlett, Utah. The SCA internship with U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service provides students with hands-on experience through a variety of conservation projects. In the process, she developed critical skills and learned about “the importance of the preservation and conservation of wildlife.” Her favorite part: becoming certified to drive and maintain her own ATV!


Photo: American Indian Science and Engineering Society (AISES): Winds of Change (Spring, 2012)

 

Article | Winds of Change Magazine

 

 

San Luis Valley at Dusk. Copyright, Joe Zinn (2009)

America's Great Outdoors: Salazar, Ashe Announce Historic Conservation Easement in Sangre de Cristo Mountains

 

Secretary of Interior Ken Salazar and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe today announced that noted conservationist Louis Bacon intends to donate a conservation easement totaling approximately 90,000 acres in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains bordering the San Luis Valley. This easement will provide the foundation for the proposed new Sangre de Cristo Conservation Area, which the Service is in the process of establishing.


Photo: San Luis Valley at Dusk. Copyright, Joe Zinn (2009)

 

Press Release | Map | America's Great Outdoors

 

 

A fish passage at the Grand Valley Project Diversion Dam on the Colorado River provides endangered fish with access to critical habitat in western Colorado. Photo courtesy Upper CO River Endangered Fish Recovery Program)

Operation of Endangered Fish Passages Reduced During Low River Flows

 

The Upper Colorado River Endangered Fish Recovery Program (Recovery Program) announced today that because of extremely low flows in the Colorado River this year, operation of fish passages  on the Colorado River may not be possible throughout the summer and early fall. Although biologists believe that suspending operation of the fish passages this summer will have a short-term impact on the endangered fish, there is a real concern for long-term impacts if the drought lasts more than one year.


Photo: A fish passage at the Grand Valley Project Diversion Dam on the Colorado River provides endangered fish with access to critical habitat in western Colorado. Credit: UCREFRP

 

Press Release

 

 




White-tailed Ptarmigan in Summer Plumage Photo:Pete Plague USFWS

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to Initiate Status Reviews of Southern, Mt. Rainier White-tailed Ptarmigan

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced today that we have completed our evaluation of a petition to list the southern and Mt. Rainier white-tailed ptarmigan as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. We determined that substantial biological information exists to warrant a more in-depth examination of the status of the southern and Mt. Rainier white-tailed ptarmigan.
Photo: White-tailed Ptarmigan in Summer Plumage Photo:Pete Plague USFWS

 

Learn More | Press Release | Flickr

 




Mule Deer at Denver's Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge

Expansion of Denver Trails System Planned

 

On National Trails Day, USFWS Mountain-Prairie Regional Director, Steve Guertin, spoke with 9 News Denver about President Obama's Great Outdoors (AGO) Initiative and plans to extend Denver's trails system.

"Under the AGO Initiative, we're reconnecting metro Denver with an existing trail system," said Guertin. "We're going to connect the Rocky Mountain Arsenal and Rocky Flats Arsenal so folks can take advantage of 500 miles of trails here in the urban area."

Photo: Deer at Denver's Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge
Courtesy:
U.S. Army / Rich Keen, DPRA

 

Learn More (Video)

 




Junior Duck Stamp

2012 Federal Duck Stamp Art Competition to be held in Ogden, Utah

 

The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service selected Weber State University in Ogden, Utah, to host the 2012 Federal Duck Stamp Art Competition on September 28 and 29, 2012.
Photo: 2010-2011 Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp
Credit: Robert Bealle of Waldorf, Maryland

 

Read More  | Learn More

 




Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge

Fish and Wildlife Service Releases the Final Comprehensive Conservation Plan and Environmental Impact Statement for Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge

 

The Fish and Wildlife Service has published the final Comprehensive Conservation Plan and Environmental Impact Statement for Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge and UL Bend National Wildlife Refuge. This conservation plan will guide the long-term management for what is considered one of the crown jewels of the National Wildlife Refuge System.
Photo: Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge

Credit: USFWS

 

Learn More

 

Sandhill Cranes in the San Luis Valley Copyright: Joe Zinn

U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Takes Initial Steps Forward in Conserving Working Landscapes in the San Luis Valley

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) released a draft Land Protection Plan and Environmental Assessment (LPP/EA) for the new proposed San Luis Valley Conservation Area (SLVCA) May 9, 2012 for a 30-day public comment period. The SLVCA seeks to create a new unit of the National Wildlife Refuge System that will protect approximately one half million acres of habitat for migratory birds and threatened and endangered species, primarily through the acquisition of conservation easements from willing landowners. The LPP/EA details the Service's authority for establishing the SLVCA, the resources the project is intended to protect, and the priority lands to be conserved for those resources.
Photo: Sandhill cranes in the San Luis Valley, Copyright: Joe Zinn

 

News Release | Learn More

 

Arapahoe Snowfly

Arapahoe Snowfly to Be Designated as a Candidate for Endangered Species Protection

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found that the Arapahoe snowfly, an insect found in two tributaries of the Cache la Poudre River in Colorado, warrants protection under the Endangered Species Act, but that proposing the species for protection is precluded by the need to address other higher priority species. The species will be added to the list of candidate species and its status will be reviewed annually.
Photo: Arapahoe Snowfly Credit: Dr. Boris Kondratieff / CSU

 

News Release | Questions and Answers | Learn More

 

Banded adult bald eagle

Service Extends Comment Period to Revise Eagle Permit Regulations

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has extended the comment period on the proposed rule, published on April 13, 2012, to revise the regulations governing the issuance of permits under the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act. The Service is also inviting ideas from the public on how the permit program can be improved. The comment period will now close on July 12, 2012.
Photo: A banded adult bald eagle perches on a tree. Credit USFWS

 

News Release | Learn More

 




Woodland Caribou by Sky Waters

Secretary Salazar, Governor Hickenlooper Sign Agreement to Establish Next Great Urban Park

 

Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar and Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper today formalized an agreement to implement conservation and recreation projects throughout the Denver and Front Range metropolitan area. Today's action builds on President Obama's America's Great Outdoors Initiative to support locally-driven projects and strengthen economies and communities with greater access to open spaces and outdoor recreation.
Photo: Bison at Denver's Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge. Courtesy: U.S. Army / Rich Keen, DPRA

 

News Release | Conceptual Map | Agreement

 

Woodland Caribou by Sky Waters

Lessons Learned from Previous Droughts Shape Endangered Fish Recovery Actions

 

As 2012 shapes up to be a near record-setting drought throughout Upper Colorado River Basin rivers, the Upper Colorado River Endangered Fish Recovery Program will use lessons learned from previous droughts to direct this year's endangered fish recovery actions. Accumulated knowledge of fish spawning patterns, movements, and habitat preferences during periods of low river flows will enable biologists to focus their time and efforts to best assist in the recovery of endangered Colorado pikeminnow, razorback sucker, bonytail and humpback chub.
Photo: USFWS biologist Ben Schleicher holds an endangered bonytail chub on Colorado's Gunnison River. Credit: Tom Chart / UCREFRP

 

News Release | UCREFRP Website

 

Woodland Caribou by Sky Waters

Utah Prairie Dog Recovery Plan Update

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has released a final revised Recovery Plan for the threatened Utah prairie dog, and proposed to revise a special rule governing management of the species under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). The new recovery plan and proposed amendments to the special management rule reflect the latest scientific information and would provide additional flexibility to address local concerns about impacts from Utah prairie dogs to human safety and property, as well as agricultural operations. Public comments or data on the proposed rule will be accepted until May 29, 2012.
Photo: Copyright Laura Romin / Larry Dalton

 

News Release | Species Information

 

Woodland Caribou by Sky Waters

Reward Offered for Whooping Crane Shooting

 

A reward has been offered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person responsible for the shooting of a whooping crane located along 354th Avenue, approximately 17 miles southwest of Miller, South Dakota.Law enforcement officers from the Service and the South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks are investigating the shooting which took place Friday afternoon on April 20, 2012. The migrating adult whooping crane was traveling with two additional whooping cranes before being shot with a high-power rifle as it was standing in a corn field.

Photo Credit: USFWS

 

News Release | Species Profile

 

Woodland Caribou by Sky Waters

National Endangered Species Day Youth Art Contest Winners Chosen

 

The grand prize winner of the Endangered Species Day Youth Art Contest is 11-year old Sky Waters from Minnesota. His painting of a woodland caribou was selected from more than 2,100 submissions. Five winners were also selected based on grade categories. This art contest is a partnership between the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Endangered Species Coalition, Association of Zoos and Aquariums and Ogden Museum of Southern Art/University of New Orleans, and is an integral part of the seventh annual national Endangered Species Day on May 18, 2012.

Photo: Woodland Caribou, painted by Sky Waters from Minnesota, was selected as the grand prize winner of the 2012 Endangered Species Day Youth Art Contest.

Credit: Endangered Species Coalition

 

News Release | Questions & Answers | Learn More | Flickr

 

 

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to Initiate Status Review of Eastern Population of Boreal Toad

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced today that it has completed its evaluation of a petition requesting the agency list either the Eastern population or Southern Rocky Mountain population of the boreal toad as a threatened or endangered distinct population segment under the Endangered Species Act. Photo Caption: Boreal toad (Anaxyrus boreas)

Photo Credit: Chris Brown / USGS

 

News Release | Questions & Answers | Learn More | Flickr


 

Kal Athannassov Wins "Best of Show” in the 2012 Colorado Junior Duck Stamp Contest

 

Kal Athannassov, a 17 year old student from Vista Ridge High School in Colorado Springs, took top honors by winning the “Best of Show” in Colorado at the 2012 Junior Duck Stamp Contest. Kal’s artwork was selected from hundreds of amazing entries from across Colorado. His acrylic paint rendition of a Black-bellied Whistling Duck, entitled "Serenity,” will represent Colorado and be entered at the National Junior Duck Stamp Competition in Washington, D.C. at the end of April. Photo Caption: 2012 Colorado Junior Duck Stamp Winning Entry by Kal Athannassov

 

News Release | View Larger Version of Kal's Artwork | More Information About the Jr. Duck Stam Program

 

 

Draft Comprehensive Conservation Plan for Benton Lake National Wildlife Refuge Complex Available for Public Review

 

The public is invited to provide comments on the Draft Comprehensive Conservation Plan (CCP) and Environmental Assessment (EA) for the Benton Lake National Wildlife Refuge Complex located on the western edge of the northern Great Plains and 12 miles north of Great Falls, Montana. The Fish and Wildlife Service will also hold a series of public meetings from April 17-19, 2012 at various locations in Montana. Written comments should be submitted by May 18, 2012.

Photo Caption: Walling Reef at Rocky Mountain Front Conservation Area

 

News Release | Learn More

 

 

Stream restoration to promote riparian habitat and Preble's meadow jumping mouse conservation_Photo courtesy of U.S. Airforce

U.S. Air Force Academy Receives 2012 Conservation Partner Award From the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

 

The U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo. received the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (Service) 2012 Military Conservation Partner Award in recognition of the Academy’s significant contribution to natural resource conservation. Between 2006 and 2011, the Academy was consistently ranked within the top five qualifying Military Installations Partner Award nominations by the Service Partner Award Review Committee.

Photo Caption: Stream restoration to promote riparian habitat and Preble's meadow jumping mouse conservation.

Credit: U.S. Airforce Military Academy

 

News Release

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The mission of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is working with
Others to conserve, protect, and enhance fish, wildlife, plants and
their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American People.
September 20, 2012
All Images Credit to and Courtesy of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Unless Specified Otherwise.
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