California Bans Prizes for Hunting Competitions

Coyote

The California Fish and Game Commission voted last week to prohibit rewards for hunting contests involving species such as coyotes and foxes, classified by the state as non-game species or furbearers. Previously cash and merchandise prizes were awarded in competitions, often termed “predator derbies”, for contestants who harvested the most animals. The ban will not prohibit hunting the species, nor will it prohibit trophy hunts for game animals such as deer.

Read more about the ban at Reuters.

Record Amount of Critical Habitat Proposed for Ringed Seals

Ringed Seal

The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) announced last week its proposed critical habitat designation for the Arctic subpopulation of Ringed Seals (Phoca hispida hispida). The estimated 350,000 square mile designation would be the largest ever for an endangered or threatened species. Most of the critical habitat would be in the Arctic Ocean and the Bering, Beaufort, and Chukchi seas off of Alaska’s coastline.

The expansive proposal encompasses such a large area because of the effect that warming oceans have on sea ice that ringed seals completely rely on for every aspect of their lives. According to NMFS, ringed seals “use sea ice as a [place] for resting, whelping (birthing), nursing, and molting” and “do not normally come ashore.” Any change in the amount or pattern of sea ice formation will have a magnified effect on the population.

NMFS originally listed the Artic seal as threatened in late 2012, but delayed designating critical habitat due to a lack of data.

Ringed seals are the smallest seal species in the Arctic and are distinguished from other seals by silver rings on their backs and sides. The Arctic subpopulation can be found in many Alaskan seas and in the Artic Basin wherever sea ice is present.

Sources: Environment and Energy News (December 2, 2014), Federal Register (December 3, 2014)

African Lion Gets Protection under ESA

ESA Foreign Species

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) recently proposed listing the African lion (Panthera leo leo) — a species found only in Africa — as threatened under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). Loss of habitat as well as access to prey such as zebras and wildebeest due to overhunting along with an increase in human-lion conflicts threaten current lion populations. If added, the African lion will join more than 600 foreign species that are not native to the United States but are protected by U.S. law.

Wildlife conservation in the U.S. did not always include foreign species. In fact, the Endangered Species Preservation Act of 1966 only protected U.S. wildlife. Then, in 1969, Congress amended the act to include species in danger of going extinct worldwide. The amendment would prohibit individuals from importing and selling listed foreign species within the U.S. At the time, the U.S. was seeing a lot of export of alligator and import of gorilla parts and products, said Janine Van Norman, chief of the Branch of Foreign Species in the FWS’s Endangered Species Program. Demand for harvest and trade of these species and others brought to light the extent to which people could harm wildlife populations. “Congress didn’t want to see U.S. citizens contributing to the global demise of species worldwide,” Van Norman said.

On June 2, 1970, FWS posted the first list of foreign species to be protected — a total of 226 species including the Asiatic lion (Panthera leo persica), Galapagos hawk (Buteo galapagoensis), Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus), Central American tapir (Tapirus bairdii), and New Zealand bushwren (Xenicus longipes). Today, the ESA protects 625 foreign species. Because these species live in other countries, the U.S. cannot directly manage their habitats like it can with domestic endangered species. Instead, the U.S. protects foreign wildlife by regulating commerce and trade. Among other things, the ESA outlaws import, export, possession, transport, and sales of listed foreign species, except by permit.

These regulations are especially helpful for species such as the southern white rhinoceros that’s plagued by poachers and wildlife traffickers. “Consumerism can drive species towards extinction,” said Van Norman. “That is why it is important to protect [endangered species] and enforce laws that protect them.” For example, global demands for ground rhino horn — an ingredient in some folk remedies — created a market for rhino poachers. Prior to September 2013, the southern white rhino (Ceratotherium simum ssp simum) was the only species of rhinoceros not protected under the ESA, and traffickers were able to import and export (with restrictions) white rhino products. Because the horns of various species are hard to distinguish without genetic testing, poachers were able to mislabel horns taken from protected species and smuggle them into the U.S. under the guise of white rhino trade. By prohibiting sales of the white rhino and its parts under the ESA, FWS succeeded in protecting all wild rhino populations.

In addition, the ESA does more than enforce trade regulations and monitor imports and exports of foreign species. According to Van Norman, listing an endangered or threatened species can call attention to the species and help justify spending on further research efforts. The ESA can also help conservation efforts. For example, the FWS established a Giant Panda import policy in 1995, which requires U.S. zoos with pandas (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) to give a certain amount of their profits back for in situ panda conservation in China. “Some people say we should only take care of wildlife in our backyard,” said Van Norman. “But ours is a bigger backyard than they are talking about.”

Trouble in the Aquatic World

Amphibians in Decline

From the winter issue of The Wildlife Professional.

An open-access article, written in collaboration with the U.S. Forest Service — a premier partner with The Wildlife Society.

How Wildlife Professionals are Battling Amphibian Declines

A parasitic fungus, similar to the one that caused the extinction of numerous tropical frog and toad species, is killing salamanders in Europe. Scientists first identified the fungus, Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans, in 2013 as the culprit behind the death of fire salamanders (Salamandra salamandra) in the Netherlands (Martel et al. 2013) and are now exploring its potential impact to other species. Although the fungus, which kills the amphibians by infecting their skin, has not yet spread to the United States, researchers believe it’s only a matter of time before it does and, when that happens, the impact on salamander populations could be devastating (Martel et al. 2014).

Reports of worldwide declines of amphibians began a quarter of a century ago (Blaustein & Wake 1990). Globally, some amphibian population declines occurred in the late 1950s and early 1960s, and declining trends continued in North America (Houlahan et al. 2000). In the earlier years, population declines were attributed primarily to overharvest due to unregulated supply of species such as the northern leopard frog (Lithobates pipiens) for educational use (Dodd 2013). In later years, however, causes of declines were less evident. In 1989, herpetologists at the First World Congress of Herpetology traded alarming stories of losses across continents and in seemingly protected landscapes, making it clear that amphibian population declines were a “global phenomenon.” In response to these reports, in 1991, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) established the Declining Amphibian Populations Task Force to better understand the scale and scope of global amphibian declines. Unfortunately, the absence of long-term monitoring data and targeted studies made it difficult for the task force to compile information.

Today, according to AmphibiaWeb.org, there are 7,342 amphibian species in the world — double the number since the first alerts of declines — making the situation appear deceptively less dire. In fact, our understanding of genetic diversity significantly raises the stakes, and we are at risk of losing far more species than we believed only a few years ago. According to the IUCN, amphibians now lead the list of vertebrate taxa affected by the larger “biodiversity crisis” and sixth major mass- extinction event on Earth (Keith et al. 2014, Wake and Vredenburg 2008).

Decline and Mitigation

Across the world, numerous factors are responsible for the ongoing decline in amphibian populations such as habitat loss, invasive species, chemical contaminants, diseases, climate change, and synergisms among several of these factors.

The Oregon spotted frog (Rana pretiosa) — recently listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act (Federal Register 2014) — is an example of a species facing combined threats. Once common in large, relatively warm wetlands with permanent water across the Pacific Northwest, Oregon spotted frog populations are believed lost from at least 78 percent of their former range. Factors — several of which are driven by human-caused changes to the landscape — such as loss of wetlands, hydrological changes, disease, and depredation by non-native predators, including introduced trout and bullfrogs, have contributed to declining populations.

Yet, for each of these threat factors alone or in concert, science, management, and the public are playing key roles in the form of research, management, and monitoring. The following is a sampling of ongoing efforts to address and mitigate threats facing amphibians in the U.S.

Research. One stressor that has been gaining attention — with significant research contributions over recent years — is the amphibian chytrid fungus, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, which causes the disease chytridiomycosis. This pathogen, described 15 years ago (Longcore et al. 1999), can be lethal under some circumstances, which has been the case for the federally endangered mountain yellow- legged frog (Rana muscosa). The species appears to be more susceptible to chytridiomycosis than other frogs in the region, and exposure to pesticides may weaken its immune response.

In response, researchers are working to understand geographic and biologic occurrence of the fungus along with pathogenicity patterns. The U.S. Forest Service — with the help of world scientists, professional ecologists, resource managers, and volunteer citizen scientists — has developed occurrence maps reflecting the 1,377 species that have been inventoried for the fungus. It’s widespread — found about half the time overall — yet at most sites with the fungus, amphibians do not show symptoms of chytridiomycosis. Now, emerging science suggests that some strains of the fungus may be located exclusively in North America (Schloegel et al. 2012). Consequently, it’s likely that some North American amphibians co-evolved with some of these strains, which would explain why we see amphibian populations that test positive for chytrid infection, but without disease-related die-offs. Given the ubiquity and antiquity of the global pandemic lineages of the amphibian chytrid, the question of whether some subtle environmental or strain change has occurred to trigger symptoms becomes extremely relevant.

Amphibians in Decline

A wood frog sits frozen in a test tube as part of a study on the effect of cold temperatures on the amphibian chytrid fungus. Wood frogs (see inset) are found at higher latitudes and have a unique ability to freeze in winter months—a characteristic that offers some protection from the fungus. However, warming temperatures caused by climate change could make the species more vulnerable to disease.
Image Credit:Tara Chestnut

New research aimed at studying the ecology of the fungus has also helped us to understand patterns of occurrence. This aquatic fungus appears to be sensitive to temperature conditions, and is not as prevalent in areas that get extremely hot and cold. In at least one strain of the fungus, researchers found that differences in frogs’ generation time and fecundity were observed in response to different thermal regimes (Voyles et al. 2012). We pursued the fungus at high latitudes to see if its range might be limited there due to extreme cold temperatures. In Alaska, we found the fungus throughout the range of the wood frog (Lithobates sylvaticus), the only amphibian species that inhabits the Alaska interior and a unique frog species in that they “freeze” in winter. Our research showed that frogs can largely clear the pathogen during this process, although upon warming, lingering fungal zoospores appeared to be able to quickly re-establish infection.

In another recent advance in research, the occurrence of the amphibian chytrid fungus can now be detected as a free-living form by filtering water, in addition to swabbing animals to detect it on their skin. As part of our research, we described water sampling across the U.S. where we reported this fungus persists year- round, with variable densities in the environment (Chestnut et al. 2014). Water is moved between watersheds for a number of management and conservation needs such as fire fighting, fish hatchery production, and reintroduction programs. Well-meaning nature enthusiasts and teachers have relocated animals and released pets and classroom animals that may be infected with or carry the amphibian chytrid fungus.

In addition, amphibians are part of an enormous world trade for food and pets, with hundreds of millions of animals, and the water they live in, moving across borders every year. Hence, infected waters may be a concern for amphibian health as well as infected individual amphibians. In fact, the stakes for salamander conservation have been raised this year, given the deadly consequences of the newly described chytrid fungus, B. salamandrivorans, for many of the world’s salamanders. Researchers note that movement of animals or the water in which they’re kept could prove lethal to native U.S. species such as forest-dwelling newts. As a result, they are exploring the possibility of modifying existing methods used to sample wetlands for amphibian chytrid fungus in an effort to provide early detection for this and other aquatic diseases.

Monitoring and Modeling Tools. Using occupancy modeling — statistical methods that account for imperfect detection — in 2013, researchers with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Amphibian Research and Monitoring Initiative provided the first estimate of the rate of amphibian declines in the U.S. (Adams et al. 2013). They studied amphibian occupancy of sites on federal lands and reported that those populations from across the nation were declining at a rate of 3.7 percent per year, noting that salamanders were declining at a faster rate than frogs. Further, their research showed that amphibian occupancy of sites declined in all parts of the U.S., with the south experiencing greatest declines.

Today, researchers can better quantify species decline metrics with monitoring conducted by a diversity of professional ecologists, citizen scientists, and land managers. Standardized survey protocols have been established based on habitats and life history attributes of species in various regions and compiled into a manual developed by Partners in Amphibian and Reptile Conservation (Graeter et al. 2013). In 2000, Congress established the USGS Amphibian Research and Monitoring Initiative to investigate the status and trends of amphibians, identify causes of amphibian declines, and provide critical information to natural resource managers to support effective management actions that address declines. However, with our current knowledge of a variety of threat factors and their potential interactions, wildlife professionals might consider increasing the scope and scale of routine amphibian monitoring.

On-the-Ground Management. With ongoing management measures, wildlife professionals are already seeing signs of success. For example, research shows that habitat restoration can result in increases in spotted frog populations, and scientists noted that between 1991 and 2011, Columbia spotted frog populations (Rana luteiventris) in the northwestern U.S. grew rapidly in response to wetland restoration in areas with historical population declines (Hossack et al. 2013). Still, long-term benefits of management efforts for many species are currently unknown; however, experts agree that no single action is enough to recover most species. Further, some threats are challenging to control such as the effects of non-native fish and bullfrogs. For example, the Oregon spotted frog requires permanent year-round water and, as a result, management actions such as altering hydrologic regimes that would reduce or eradicate harmful predators could also hurt the frogs and other aquatic organisms.

In terms of threats from disease, federal and state wildlife agencies, in collaboration with the Woodland Park Zoo in Washington State, have implemented reintroduction programs that screen Oregon spotted frogs for the amphibian chytrid fungus before release to new locations. In the wild, Oregon spotted frogs have tested positive for several diseases of concern including the amphibian chytrid fungus, the fungus-like pathogen Saprolegnia, and trematode parasite Ribeiroia ondatrae, which causes limb malformations. However, it isn’t clear if these diseases are a threat to populations because the strains that occur throughout the range along with the effect of co-infections are not known. Strain differences warrant identification and study for differential pathogenicity. Screening animals prior to reintroduction is a sound precaution that will prevent the introduction of virulent strains that may be present in the area where animals were collected but may be novel to areas where they are released.

Collaborative Efforts. Ultimately, partnerships and joint efforts are critical in managing amphibian populations. For a host of considerations such as ethical, aesthetic, biomedical, ecological, or “One-Health” ─ a worldwide strategy for expanding interdisciplinary collaborations and communications for the health of humans and the environment ─ we are no longer free to consider species as we once have. Our role has shifted from exploiting species for various uses toward becoming their stewards. The bridging of science, management, and the public to address amphibian declines is creating a new platform for conservation biology, where partnerships and open communication pathways expedite the pace of science and its application to field settings. It’s a bottom-up approach where local human communities are making great strides to affect their local wildlife communities, and a top-down approach where programs that span regions and continents can have strong ripple effects. This is especially evident in the U.S., where a variety of state, federal, tribal, and private lands are being managed for eco- system services inclusive of amphibian diversity.

Amphibians in Decline

A researcher swabs a rough-skinned newt for traces of the chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis. Authors Olson and Chestnut recently completed a study in the Willamette Valley, Oregon, investigating the relationship between B. dendrobatidis in the environment and the occurrence of disease in amphibian populations.
Image Credit:Tara Chestnut

Public and private coalitions are growing as neighboring landowners determine where to establish protected areas, and how each group can address amphibian declines and identify solutions, which may span a larger spatial context. As landowners and managers coordinate efforts, each entity contributes resources that allow species inventories across a much broader area than could be achieved by one landowner alone. This cooperative process facilitates greater understanding of amphibian species ecology, recognition of new species, understanding of known or suspected threats, and implementation of multi-agency protections. In some cases, these cooperative efforts and conservation strategies have made formal protections such as listing under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) less necessary.

A prime example of this process has been the development of multi-agency conservation strategies among federal agencies that have helped preclude formal decisions to list species under the ESA. The tri-agency conservation strategy for the forest-dependent Siskiyou Mountains salamander (Plethodon stormi) is one example of this approach. In fact, targeted surveys for animals and habitats resulted in discovery of a new species — the Scott Bar salamander (Plethodon asupak) — and the designation of high-priority sites for long-term management of the Siskiyou Mountains salamander across a swath of Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management Lands, in cooperation with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

What Lies Ahead

We are entering a new age of information transfer about wildlife threats and population status, which enables an improved response of both research and management to a variety of stressors. E-communications and real-time web portals for information are being developed for a variety of purposes, and this will change how we aggregate and assess data, conduct risk assessments, and respond to critical issues. The fate of amphibians and other imperiled species are not random. There is a human link to most known amphibian threats and, as a result, we have a role in both their imperilment and stewardship. We expect to continue to test new tools for amphibian conservation that may have application for broader wildlife consideration. Amphibians also serve as ideal tools to teach future generations how wildlife are integrated with their environment and how our actions affect their futures and ours. In this way, amphibians are helping to bind science, management, and the public into a new alliance for conservation.

This article has been reviewed by subject-matter experts.

A Long Awaited Homecoming for Wood Bison

Wood Bison

Wood bison (Bison bison athabascae), the larger cousins of the more common plains bison, are being released back into the Alaska wild. Alaska has been housing wood bison in captivity at the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center (AWCC) since 2003, but had been unable to release the animals into the wild due to regulatory uncertainty. Wood bison were classified as an “experimental, non-essential population” under the Endangered Species Act in July 2014. Officials and local stakeholders are currently working on the logistical issues of transporting the bison from the AWCC to the remote Innoko Flats.

Read more at Newsweek.

USDA Wildlife Services Aids in Discovery of Mysterious Eider Virus

APHIS Wildlife Disease Biologist Randy Mickley

Wildlife Services employs a diverse team of wildlife experts who help resolve a wide array of human-wildlife conflicts. Wildlife disease management is one area where our expertise in capturing and handling wildlife is frequently called upon by our conservation partners. I am pleased to present the following story how a Wildlife Services disease biologist in Massachusetts made important contributions to the discovery of a new virus impacting a keystone waterfowl species.

APHIS Wildlife Disease-Biologist Randy Mickley

APHIS Wildlife Disease Biologist Randy Mickley
Image Credit: Randy Mickley, USDA APHIS Wildlife Services

Since 1998, thousands of North America’s largest sea duck, the Common eider (Somateria mollissima), have been mysteriously dying on Cape Cod’s beaches. Nantucket Sound is the winter home to many thousands of these eiders at the southern edge of their Atlantic coast range. Eiders are an important indicator species of ecosystem health, but since 2006 more than 6,000 common eiders have fallen ill around Cape Cod National Seashore’s Jeremy Point near Wellfleet, Massachusetts where a large mussel bed attracts them.

With concerns about the population-level impact this disease could have, the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service enlisted the help of USDA APHIS Wildlife Services to determine the underlying cause of these unexplained deaths. With cooperation from over twenty federal, state and university collaborators, APHIS wildlife disease biologist Randy Mickley has provided thousands of biological samples from dead and sickened common eiders to the U. S. Geological Survey’s National Wildlife Health Center in Madison, WI and the Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study in Athens, GA for laboratory analyses. Necropsies and tests conducted on these samples indicated that a virus was the cause of illness in the majority of these cases. In 2010, pathologists were finally able to isolate a previously unrecognized orthomyxovirus, tentatively named the Wellfleet Bay virus, after its geographic origin.

Seroprevalence studies from common eider populations across their Atlantic breeding range showed Massachusetts’s common eiders have the highest incidence of exposure to Wellfleet Bay virus. Genomic analysis of the Wellfleet Bay virus has indicated a tick vector may be involved in transmission. GPS telemetry and DNA marker studies are underway to try to identify a source of the virus and mode of transmission. By developing a better understanding of eider movement patterns, scientists hope to better manage the disease and prevent its expansion to other parts of the eider’s Atlantic range.

Wildlife Services is a Strategic Partner of The Wildlife Society.

Southwest Section WOWs Us!

The Southwest Section of The Wildlife Society hosted a conference call on November 20, 2014 to spotlight the formation of a Women of Wildlife Committee, also known as WOW. In 2011, a few TWS members and leaders began developing WOW, a group intended to promote and support women in the wildlife profession and to provide mentoring opportunities and advice.

The conference call included two conversations with women in the field of wildlife. The Director of the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish, Alexandra Sandoval, was interviewed on her thoughts on women in positions of leadership. There was also a discussion with Jessica Homyack, Sara Schweitzer, and Tabitha Graves, authors of, “Glass Ceilings and Institutional Biases: A closer look at barriers facing women in science and technical fields”.

Leland Pierce, President of the Southwest Section, and Carol Chambers, Southwest Section Representative to TWS Council, led the call. The conversation with Director Sandoval included a Q&A session about her path to becoming the Director of the NM Dept. of Game and Fish as well as her techniques for recruiting diversity in the wildlife field, particularly women, Native Americans, and Hispanics. Sandoval’s main technique is to allow different people to have a voice.

“I want to have a more diverse conversation, but we have to approach those groups and hear what they have to say,” she said. “My plan is to allow for those conversations and interactions to happen. When we allow for that diversity of thought, it attracts positive energy.”

Following Sandoval’s Q&A, Homyack, Schweitzer, and Graves discussed their recent article, which appeared in the Fall 2014 issue of The Wildlife Professional. The authors investigated the variation in structure among organization types and analyzed any biases about men or women in the wildlife management field.

“Literature shows that overt discrimination against women and other minorities has decreased over time but we are still seeing sub-biases that have important ramifications for retaining women in the career,” said Homyack.

The call concluded with discussions on the formation of the new TWS Southwest Section WOW Committee. The main goal of the committee is to provide positive influence for women in the wildlife profession through the Southwest Section. The committee plans to meet in conjunction with the Arizona and New Mexico joint annual meeting on February 5-7, 2015, and possibly at the Texas annual meeting on February 19-22, 2015. The Southwest Section hopes to have a committee chair in place by February.

If you’re interested in more information about the committee please contact Leland Pierce at Leland.pierce@state.nm.us.

Senators Pen Letter Urging Reauthorization of LWCF

Appalachian National Scenic Trail

A bi-partisan group of Senators has written a letter urging reform for the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF). The 35 Democrat and six Republican co-signees wrote to the Senate leadership explaining the importance of the fund and why action is needed during the lame-duck session.

The LWCF is funded by revenue from offshore oil and gas leases and is the federal government’s primary means of buying land for conservation purposes. The fund also serves as an important source of grants for states to purchase land for recreation and conservation. The fund is authorized to receive $900 million from these revenues each year, but Congress has only appropriated the full amount twice in its 50 year history. The LWCF is appropriated approximately $340 million on average each year.

Senators Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Richard Burr (R-NC), who spearheaded this effort, want to make the LWCF’s authorized $900 million mandatory spending and not subject to the annual appropriations process. Furthermore, the Senators contend that immediate action is needed to avert the fund’s pending expiration in September 2015.

Some fiscal conservatives are wary of mandatory funding for the LWCF and want to avoid additional federal land purchases. They argue that the backlog in maintenance projects on national parks, wildlife refuges, and other federally managed lands should be addressed before adding anymore to the federal estate. The anticipated incoming committee chairmen of the House Natural Resource Committee, Rob Bishop (R-UT), and the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), have both expressed criticism of LWCF funded land purchases.

For more information on LWCF and its importance to wildlife management, refer to the Land and Water Conservation Fund Policy Brief developed by the TWS Government Affairs Team.

Sources: Energy and Environment Daily (November 25, 2014)

Controversy in Alberta over Proposed Wildlife Regulations

Mule Deer Herd

Alberta’s wildlife regulations — rules that support the Wildlife Act in managing the province’s wildlife — are set to expire on June 30, 2015, and proposed revisions by the Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development Ministry are generating controversy.

For instance, ministry officials have proposed to allow four new species of birds, Aplomado Falcon (Falco femoralis), Eurasian Sparrowhawk (Accipiter nisus), Saker Falcon (Falco cherrug), and Rough-legged Hawk (Buteo lagopus), to be used for falconry — a move that has stimulated controversy because three of the four species to be added are non-native species in Alberta. Opponents to the proposal argue that use of non-native species could lead to hybridization among species and potentially spread of disease if the trained birds escape.

Also under the proposed regulations, dogs would be allowed to accompany big game hunters. Currently big game hunters in Alberta are not allowed to take a dog on a hunt unless they’re hunting cougars. Although proposed regulations would not allow dogs to pursue big game while they are in the field, they can be used as pack animals. Some Albertans worry that the dogs will be used to track game illegally if allowed to be in the field during a hunt.

Further, restrictions on off-road vehicle use would be removed, generating discussion over potential disturbances to the landscape and fair chase considerations. Additional changes liberalizing the kinds of tools allowed to be used have further raised concerns about fair chase and the preservation of hunting traditions in the province.

The Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development Ministry has created a confidential survey for Albertans to share their feedback on proposed revisions to the regulations. Albertans can also contribute to the discussion online on three of the proposed revisions; the number of landowner special licenses, allowing companion dogs when hunting big game, and falconry regulations. The Alberta Wildlife Regulations are open for comment until December 15, 2014.

Sources Calgary Herald (November 15, 2014), MindMixer

Mexican Wolf Recovery Program Revised

Mexican Wolf

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed revisions to its Mexican wolf (Canis lupus baileyi) recovery program. With the completion of a final Environmental Impact Statement, FWS proposes to expand the Mexican Wolf Experimental Population Area and provide for 300 to 325 wolves in that area. The proposed revisions also include clarifications on the definition of take related to this nonessential experimental population.

Find out more about the proposed revisions on the FWS website and the Federal Register.