Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Go Fishing, At a Fisheries Facility Near You

The U.S. Fish and Service is celebrating National Fishing and Boating Week which starts Saturday, June 4, and hosting events all around the country encouraging families to cast their rods into the water and go fishing. Most events are free and are sure to provide entertainment for the whole family. Find one close to you and join the nationwide celebration.
List of events.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

An Event Old As Time

The event is as old as time – annual bird migrations. May 14, 2011 is International Migratory Bird Day, a day to go birding, a day to celebrate conservation.

So, flock to one of the 70 National Fish Hatcheries across the country, where you might be surprised to find an array of spring migrants. Uvalde National Fish Hatchery in
south Texas is a gem birding destination, where colorful birds with colorful names—Little Blue Heron, Black Phoebe, Greater Yellowlegs, Blue-winged Teal, Vermilion Flycatcher—stop and recharge on their epic journey north to breeding habitats.
Waterfowl and songbirds, like this Black Phoebe, frequent the waters associated National Fish Hatcheries. USFWS
As Planet Earth wobbles back into the vernal position, it brings with it birds migrating north. You should migrate outside with your field glasses and see what you can see.
    

Monday, April 25, 2011

Dangerous Encounters with Alligator Gar

April 24-28, the National Geographic channel’s "Dangerous Encounters" with Brady Barr will be joining Ricky Campbell, manager of Private John Allan National Fish Hatchery, along with other USFWS staff, to highlight restoration efforts for the alligator gar.  They will film the dramatic capture, tagging and tracking efforts on the river, and then spawning and rearing at the hatchery.  The show also plans to highlight the Service’s work with alligator snapping turtles.

Warm Springs NFH, Mammoth Spring NFH, Baton Rouge FWCO, St. Catherine Creek NWR and the North Mississippi NWR Complex will all assist with this exciting filming event. 

Thursday, April 21, 2011

The nation’s largest retailer has joined a national partnership to educate customers about the proper way to dispose of unused prescription drugs. Walmart is the first of 139 supporters to launch a national educational program in over 3,500 of their pharmacies promoting the SMARXT DISPOSALcampaign. 

SMARxT DISPOSAL is a partnership, led by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, American Pharmacists Association and the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, to inform the public about appropriate disposal of medication and the natural resource benefits of these actions.

Flushing medications down the toilet or pouring them down the drain are two of the many ways medications and other substances can enter waterways, which can harm the plants and animals that live there. One way to prevent this from happening is by increasing awareness about proper medication disposal.

Walmart has posted signs in more than 3,500 of their pharmacies, as well as online at www.walmart.com, with directions for customers on the proper disposal of their unused medications.   The company will also be printing SMARXT DISPOSAL information on all pharmacy bags so customers can understand how to dispose of unused medicines in an environmentally friendly way.

“We are extremely pleased that Walmart has joined us in our campaign to educate people on how they should dispose of their unused medication in their homes,” said U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Acting Director Rowan Gould. “Walmart has millions of customers across the country, and by providing information to each of them, we are sure to have a big impact on preventing chemicals and drugs from reaching our waterways and affecting our plants, animals and ecosystems.”   

“Walmart is pleased to be an active corporate supporter of SMARXT DISPOSAL,” said Dr. John Agwunobi, president of Walmart Health and Wellness.  ”Our customers are looking for environmentally friendly ways to dispose of their unused and unwanted medications, and SMARXT DISPOSAL can provide the answers our customers are seeking.  We are proud to be part of this solution and we know that our communities will benefit from this partnership.”

The SMARXT DISPOSAL partnership recommends people pour their unused medication into a sealable plastic bag, add kitty litter, sawdust, or coffee grounds, and then seal the plastic bag before disposing of it in the trash. For more information on SMARXT DISPOSAL and how you can properly dispose of unused medicines, please visit http://www.smarxtdisposal.net/index.html.

Numerous studies demonstrate that the endocrine systems of certain fish and wildlife have been affected by exposure to endocrine disrupting compounds.  Endocrine disruption can be caused by exposure to synthetic or naturally occurring chemicals including pharmaceuticals, detergents, fragrances, fire retardants, disinfectants, plastics, resins, pesticides, and insect repellants.  The Service, along with its corporate partners, the American Pharmacists Association and the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, has taken a proactive role in reducing unused medication and endocrine disrupting compounds in the environment.  Together, we have developed and implemented the SMARXT DISPOSAL campaign to educate the public on the environmental threats posed by flushing medicines or pouring them down the drain and provided them a safer alternative involving disposal of medications in the trash. 

The SMARXT DISPOSAL campaign recommendations have been adopted by the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. 

www.fws.gov

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Banking on Fisheries Conservation

The rewards of fisheries conservation are both intrinsic and material. The economic output related to the conservation successes of the Fisheries Program is responsible for 68,000 jobs in a variety of industries. Craig Springer photo
For the last 500 years, scribes have waxed poetic about the virtues and vices of fishing. Some lament the challenges and others applaud the rewards of the quiet sport. The apostle Izzak Walton wrote in his book The Compleat Angler in 1653 that fishing “will prove to be a virtue, a reward unto itself.” Fishing and conservation have inherent and intrinsic values, and they own other values that are very measurable.
Two U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service economists, Joseph Charbonneau, Ph.D., and James Caudill, Ph.D., recently made such measurements. They assessed the economic contributions made by the work performed in the Fisheries Program, nationwide, from 2004 to 2008. The numbers they reported in their peer-reviewed work were adjusted to the value of a dollar in late 2010. The numbers are stunning, and would make any mutual fund manager blush.
Results from the entire Fisheries Program and its 154 field stations account for a total economic output of $3.6 billion, coming from an investment of $128 million. In the National Fish Hatchery System, 123 million stocked fish yielded 13 million angler-days in turn spurring $554 million in retail sales, $256 million in wages of jobs created, where $37 million was returned to the federal treasury in income tax. Another $34 million was generated in state income taxes.
Better habitat means better fishing. Toward that end, the Fisheries Program has restored thousands of acres and miles of streams for the betterment of fish, and it is good for people. The economists calculate that habitat conservation has a value of $2 billion. Money changing hands means jobs. All told, the economic output related to the conservation successes of the Fisheries Program is responsible for 68,000 jobs in a variety of industries.
Five hundred years of fishing literature may have laid threadbare any questions on the value of fishing. But one thing is clear, conservation is important to the economy, and you can take that to the bank.

Monday, April 11, 2011

National Volunteer Week -- Thank You Fisheries Volunteers!


It would be misleading to say that what volunteers do for conservation in the Fisheries Program is immeasurable.

It's very measurable--they contributed 150,000 hours of service nationwide last year at many of our National Fish Hatcheries and Fish and Wildlife Conservation Offices. That’s equal to 3,750 40-hour work weeks.

Volunteers wear many hats, too, from giving guided tours to helping with grounds maintenance. They organize events; work at visitor centers; clean raceways and nets, and culture fish.

So, hats off to the many volunteers who make fisheries conservation their concern.

Happy National Volunteer Week.


Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Mountain-Prairie Region's 2010 Year in Review


The Mountain-Prairie Region's Year in Review video is now available on their web site. Visit the link below to see all the great conservation work the Mountain-Prairie Region employees and their partners completed in 2010. Sit back, relax and enjoy.