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Month: August 2019

FYI News

Climate changes is shifting Bracken Cave bat migration

August 8, 2019

South Texas’s Bracken Cave is home to 15 million Mexican free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) — the world’s largest known bat colony — and their use of the cave is changing dramatically. In the 1950s, researchers …

Conservation News

Court decision puts grizzly bears back on ESA list

August 7, 2019

Grizzly bears (Ursus arctos horribilis) in the Greater Yellowstone Area are formally back on the Endangered Species Act list after a court order was issued in September 2018. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service declared the …

FYI News

What’s killing bumblebees? It could be the trees

August 7, 2019

A search for the cause of massive bumblebee (Bombus spp.) deaths has reached some surprising conclusions. The culprit may not be humans. It may be the trees. “Not every dead bee could be because of …

TWS News

Apply for Native Student Professional Development Program

August 7, 2019

The Native Student Professional Development Program provides Native American students with the opportunity to attend The Wildlife Society’s Annual Conference, the largest gathering of wildlife professionals in North America. Now in its 12th year, the …

Dana Kobilinsky

Watch: Temperature drives internal clock for monarchs

August 6, 2019

When monarch butterflies overwinter in central Mexico and along the California coast, they spend much of the time dormant to help with their winter survival before reproduction. Researchers recently found temperature plays an important role …

FYI News

Rabies vaccination targets raccoons in Maine

August 6, 2019

USDA Wildlife Services is spreading more than 300,000 rabies vaccine baits in Maine in an effort to address the spread of rabies in raccoons (Procyon lotor). The bait will be spread over a 2,405-square-mile area …

TWS News

Reno Renaissance: Downtown Diversity Brings the City to Life

August 6, 2019

Reno may have originally been branded The Biggest Little City because of neon lights, Vegas-like casinos, and a 24-hour scene, but this moniker feels apt in today’s Reno for different reasons. Over the past decade, …

Conservation News

Florida panther population grows, but gene flow still a concern

August 5, 2019

Efforts to bolster the only existing population of Florida panthers have been largely successful, but genetic health of the animals will likely remain a concern due to a lack of habitat connectivity. “Definitely the population …

TWS Wildlife News

Monitoring program studies bats’ disappearance

August 5, 2019

Bats are hard to find. They’re small (some weigh less than three pennies), they fly by night and hide during the day, but perhaps the most challenging part is that there are fewer of them …

FYI News

Intentionally introduced beetles impact songbird habitat

August 5, 2019

Beetles introduced to the United States from Asia have done their job in eating up invasive tamarisks in the Southwest. The problem is, the tamarisk beetles (Diorhabda carinulata) are doing too good of a job, …

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