Wildlife Vocalizations: Josh Luebke

The biggest lesson that life has taught me so far is to keep an open mind and to do my best to fight any prejudices that I may have learned throughout my life. These prejudices could be as simple as seeing the good that spiders and snakes do for their ecosystems rather than viewing them as “creepy crawlies.” Many of them can be as cute as puppies or kittens!

A selfie of Luebke taken at St. Mary’s Glacier in Colorado in 2021. Image courtesy of Josh Luebke.

Other prejudices are trickier to navigate, such as any deep-set acts or thoughts of racism, sexism, etc. People come from all different walks of life, and differences between all of us should be seen as opportunities to learn and celebrate the things that make each of us unique. The biggest challenge that I face in my field of outdoor education and interpretation is finding ways for people to connect with each other. That almost always has to start interpreter.
Meeting other people, animals and plants with a closed mind means that you have stopped learning the truth about them.

Luebke (far right) with friends Nicole, Connie, Kelli, and Josh at Alpine Hills Adventure Park leading a 2023 Valentine’s day Cocoa & Co. Hike/Bike event. Image courtesy of Josh Luebke.

I am not perfect by any means, but looking inward to find and learn about the things that scare me or make me uncomfortable has become a tried and true method of opening my mind to the unknown to understand the world and embrace all of the things that make it beautifully diverse.

Wildlife Vocalizations is a collection of short personal perspectives from people in the field of wildlife sciences. Learn more about Wildlife Vocalizations, and read other contributions.

Submit your story for Wildlife Vocalizations or nominate your peers and colleagues to encourage them to share their story.

For questions, please contact tws@wildlife.org.

Header Image: Luebke holds a Pi, the bald eagle, during the Care and Management of Captive Raptors Workshop offered by The Raptor Center at the University of Minnesota in 2023. Image courtesy of Josh Luebke.

Colorado calf killed by wolf

A wolf in Colorado has killed a calf, marking the first livestock kill after the predators were reintroduced to the state in December. Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials confirmed the kill after examining the wolves and nearby tracks.

“The field investigation found multiple tooth rake marks on the calf’s hindquarters and neck, and hemorrhaging under the hide, consistent with wolf depredation,” Jeromy Huntington, one of the agencies wildlife managers, said in a statement.

Officials say the wolf or wolves responsible were part of the group of wolves reintroduced in December. The calf’s owner can be compensated for the loss.

Read more from the Associated Press.

Header Image: A wolf runs free after being among 10 wolves released in Colorado in December. Credit: Colorado Parks and Wildlife

2024 TWS Elections: Vice President

The ballot for The Wildlife Society’s 2024 elections includes nominees for the position of vice president

Electronic ballots will be sent May 29 to all members with an email address. Members without an email address will receive a paper ballot in the mail. Voting will close June 30. Mailed paper ballots must be postmarked on or before June 30. In accordance with TWS’ Bylaws, newly elected council members are scheduled to be installed at the next regular meeting of Council during the 31st Annual Conference, Oct. 19-23, in Baltimore, Maryland.

The candidates’ statements expressing their vision for The Wildlife Society and their interest in running for this council position are below.

NOMINEES FOR VICE PRESIDENT

Adam Ahlers

I’m interested in running for the office of TWS Vice President so I can continue my service to TWS in an expanded leadership capacity. My past work with TWS, state chapters, and CMPS has been rewarding and I genuinely feel like my volunteer work in these units has positively affected the careers of other wildlife professionals and aided in the management and conservation of wildlife populations and landscapes. It is a great feeling to work with people who are passionate about wildlife conservation and management and who also volunteer their free time to contribute to the efforts of TWS (and state chapters and sections). The wildlife profession is changing in some ways, and TWS needs to adapt to meet the needs and ambitions of its members and also wildlife professional who are not members. Additionally, TWS needs to remain relevant to wildlife professionals across North America while also remaining an effective voice in wildlife management and conservation. My own leadership vision has been shaped by working with outstanding leaders across various disciplines ranging from agriculture, state agencies, academia, and the military. This also includes working with great leadership at the TWS, state chapter, and section levels. My leadership vision has equally been shaped by my work with less-than-perfect leaders in these fields and by my own shortcomings in past leadership roles. I would be excited to volunteer my time to help TWS meet the challenges ahead of our organization and enhance our relevancy as the voice of wildlife conservation and management in North America. As Vice President of TWS, I would work closely with our membership to ensure that our organization’s work will help enhance wildlife conservation and management. Additionally, I would work with our diverse TWS members and others to ensure we are delivering resources to wildlife professionals that enhance professional development and help them achieve their conservation goals.

Read Adam Ahlers’ complete biographical sketch here.

Evelyn Merrill

I started down The Wildlife Society (TWS) path in the 1970s and have never looked back. I have seen TWS evolve just like the ecosystems around me, and this is a strength of The Society. The current revision of the Strategic Plan reflects a blend of maintaining our core values while adapting to the realities of our future. I intend to support this direction with particular attention in: 1) strengthening policy engagement in North America while keeping science at the forefront and being proactive in developing effective partnerships, 2) fostering opportunities for students and new professionals (who will be our teachers and our legacy) along with seasoned mentors; 3) diversifying our community and expanding inclusiveness in creative ways that may take stepping outside of the box; and 4) by not losing sight of the financial solvency needed to support our staff and everyday efforts. The best steps forward for each of these may not always be clear and outcomes may not be immediate. But when weighing the options, we need to be transparent and communicate clearly the end-game, institute our decisions in an equitable manner, and learn from our mistakes. Martin Luther King was a leader because he had not only a plan but a dream. I aspire to help TWS stay relevant and to support our members and those around them to enjoy wildlife in sustainable and reverent ways that battle the malaise of emerging environmental grief, unites us in cause, and motivates us to step up. I am passionate about ensuring the same wonder and enthusiasm for the world of wildlife in the future that I have been fortunate enough to find in my life. I see my service to TWS as an important means for achieving that, and as an enduring legacy of my career.

Read Evelyn Merrill’s complete biographical sketch here.

Study sounds alarm for native bee

A range-wide genetic study of the endangered rusty-patched bumblebee found the species may be headed toward extinction.

“If that trajectory continues, this species could blink out in the next couple decades,” said John Mola, an assistant professor at Colorado State University and the lead author of the study published in the Journal of Insect Science.

The rusty-patched bumblebee (Bombus affinis) was the first bee species to be federally listed as endangered in 2017 through the U.S. Endangered Species Act. Its numbers dropped rapidly starting in the late 1990s, likely due to a combination of pesticides, pathogens, habitat loss and degradation and climate change.  

The study found that even where the bee is still found, scientists observed fewer colonies than a stable species would have and a high rate of inbreeding, which can threaten the long-term viability of a species.

“When that happens, those populations essentially face a death sentence,” Mola said. “They basically have incompatible genetic systems with other populations of the same species.” 

Read more from Colorado State University.

WSB: Spotting leopard seals by algorithm

When a female leopard seal started making regular appearances in Auckland, New Zealand marinas, it attracted a lot of attention—and raised a lot of questions.

Leopard seals (Hydrurga leptonyx) are usually seen on pack ice far south in the Antarctic and subantarctic. The persistent appearances by the seal dubbed Owha—short for her Māori name “He owha nā ōku tūpuna,” or “treasured gift from our ancestors”—showed how at home these seals can be farther north.

But exactly how they use their wide range remains a mystery—one that could have ramifications for other species facing the effects of climate change.

“We just don’t know,” said Alex Grabham, a PhD student at the University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand, and a research assistant for the nonprofit conservation organization LeopardSeals.org.

Leopard seals are known to make seasonal forays northward from Antarctica to such far-flung destinations as Chile, South Africa and New Zealand. But some of those seals seem to stay north instead of heading back to Antarctica. How many? Researchers don’t know that, either.

But understanding where leopard seals go could reveal some clues about climate change, Grabham said. Because these large seals have such a diverse diet—from krill, to penguins to other seal species—they are expected to handle a warming Antarctic better than some other species. Where they find food could provide information about unseen changes in the ecosystem.

“Because they range so far,” Grabham said, “once we understand their distribution, once we understand their movements and their dispersal, they could essentially act as an indicator of the effects of climate change. If they start using areas differently or they’re not seen in typically frequented areas, it could indicate ecological changes with the potential to impact a whole host of species from New Zealand and South America downwards.”

As leopard seals’ name suggests, the patterns on their fur are unique, helping biologists identify and track individuals. To do that, scientists need photos—and they have a lot of them. “For Owha, we have several thousand photographs,” Grabham said.

At LeopardSeals.org, Grabham has been helping to assemble a catalog of leopard seals spotted in New Zealand. With some 200 individuals so far, the catalog is based largely on photos taken by citizen scientists—mostly tourists and locals who spot a seal as they’re out walking.

“We are eternally grateful for all of this,” he said. “We don’t have the resources or the manpower—especially in such a sparsely populated country with such a vast coastline. We wouldn’t have most of this data.”

But citizen scientists’ images typically lack the scientific rigor expected from a biologist. Scientists often try to capture the same part of the animal from the same angle in the same position—say, the left side of the head—to create consistency among the images, Grabham said. Tourists, on the other hand, shoot whatever they find. That could mean a face or the whole body. The left side or the right side. A body turned in one direction could stretch out the seals’ spots. If it turned the other way, it could scrunch them up. Some images are blurry. Some are too dark. Some are too light.

Weeding through all these images takes time, Grabham said. “Somebody might take three photographs,” he said. “Somebody else might take 300.”

To try to save time identifying all these images, Grabham and his team turned to semiautomated programs, which use algorithms to try to identify individual seals by their markings. In a study published in the Wildlife Society Bulletin, Grabham and colleagues Krista van der Linde and Ximena Nelson compared three programs to see which did the best job at identifying individual seals that team members had already confirmed.

The researchers compared HotSpotter, Interactive Individual Identification System’s  Pattern+ and Wild-ID—three species-generalist programs widely used to identify a variety of species by their markings, from jaguars (Panthera onca) to giraffes (Giraffa camelopardalis).

Each program had advantages in some situations, Grabham said, and in some cases, researchers may want to use more than one. But overall, HotSpotter’s feature-rich user interface proved to be the most accurate.

That’s especially helpful for small organizations that rely on volunteers, he said, although a species-specific program could prove to be even more accurate, further speeding up the identification process. Grabham hopes his research can help make that possible.

“This was sort of the first step,” he said.

This article features research that was published in the Wildlife Society Bulletin, a TWS peer-reviewed, open-access journal. Join TWS now to access all TWS journals and read the latest in wildlife research.

Hunter harvests wolf in Michigan coyote hunt

An animal harvested as part of a legal coyote hunt in Michigan turned out to be a gray wolf—an unusual appearance in a part of the state’s Lower Peninsula where wolves have not been seen in over a century.

Michigan’s known wolf population is in the Upper Peninsula. The state’s Department of Natural Resouces has found only a few signs of wolf presence in that part of Michigan since the state’s gray wolf (Canis lupus) population became reestablished in the 1980s.

“This is an unusual case, and the DNR is actively delving into the matter to learn more about this particular animal’s origin,” said Brian Roell, large carnivore specialist for the DNR. “While rare, instances of wolves traversing vast distances have been documented, including signs of wolves in recent decades in Michigan’s Lower Peninsula.”

The hunter said he encountered what he believed to be a large coyote (Canis latrans). The hunter harvested the animal, which weighed 84 pounds—more than twice the size of typical eastern coyotes. A genetic test by the DNR showed the animal to be a wolf.

Once present throughout Michigan, wolves are now confined almost exclusively to the Upper Peninsula. However, wolves have been detected in the northern Lower Peninsula, including a collared wolf captured and killed by a coyote trapper in 2004, wolflike tracks discovered in 2011 and 2015 and a wolf appearance on a trail camera confirmed by a scat analysis in 201.

Read more from the Michigan Department of Natural Resources.

New agreement paves the way for ocelot reintroduction on private lands

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the nonprofit East Foundation have reached an agreement that would allow for the release of endangered ocelots on private lands in South Texas.

The safe harbor agreement allows landowners to continue with ranching operations in exchange for allowing recovery efforts on their land.

Under the agreement, ocelots will strategically be released at the East Foundation’s San Antonio Viejo Ranch with the hopes of establishing a permanent population. Researchers will monitor them to evaluate program success.

Listed as endangered since 1982, the ocelot (Leopardus pardalis) is known to only have breeding populations in scrublands along the Gulf Coast in South Texas.

While the agreement was reached with the East Foundation, a certificate of inclusion can allow landowners in surrounding counties to join even if they don’t release ocelots on their properties, as long as they promise to allow ocelots to use their land and they permit monitoring efforts.

The safe harbor agreement on the San Antonio Viejo Ranch also establishes that landowners within 31 miles of the ocelot release locations will not have any land use restrictions or other regulations placed upon them related to reintroduced ocelots—even if the landowners do not sign up for a certificate of inclusion.

The agreement is valid for 30 years but can be extended.

“The importance of innovative approaches and partnerships between private landowners, science, state agencies, federal agencies, and non-governmental organizations in moving conservation forward is why we are here today,” said TWS member John Silovsky, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department Wildlife Division director in a press release. “This safe harbor agreement will allow landowners to continue with their operations unimpeded while also helping in the recovery of ocelots to Texas.”

The East Foundation promotes land stewardship, using its 217,000 acres as a “working laboratory” to conserve healthy rangelands through ranching and wildlife management. It’s San Antonio Viego Ranch was identified as an ocelot reintroduction site based on its dense vegetation and remote location.

“Private working lands are essential for the conservation and recovery of native species, and private land stewards are often very interested in these efforts,” said Jason Sawyer, chief science officer for the East Foundation, in a press release. “However, they must weigh the conservation benefits against perceived risks often associated with the management of federally listed species. Part of our planning effort included ensuring that private landowners can actively participate in a desirable conservation activity without jeopardizing their ability to manage their land for multiple benefits. The Safe Harbor Agreement we are signing today provides private landowners with that assurance.”

With the safe harbor agreement in place, partners plan to begin developing a source stock of ocelots for reintroduction. Over the next year, they plan to construct an ocelot conservation facility in Kingsville to breed and raise ocelots. Producing the first offspring is expected to take a few years.

TWS member Lindsay Martinez, research program coordinator for the East Foundation, spoke about these efforts at the 2023 TWS Annual Conference in Louisville, Kentucky. “We’ve turned scientific relationships into conservation partnerships,” Martinez said. As relationship between conservationists and landowners improved, she said, “private landowners may be one of the biggest assets for ocelot conservation.”

Leatherbacks follow jellyfish along U.S. coastline

Leatherback sea turtles are feeding on jellyfish in a number of places along the East Coast, including a major hotspot in Nantucket.

The endangered turtles make long migrations along the East Coast, from nesting areas in the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico to the shores of Nova Scotia. The route includes some proposed offshore wind farms, including sites off the coast of Cape Cod, Long Island and Virginia.

“They’re coming all the way from southern latitudes and going north, mainly just to feed on jellyfish,” said Mitchell Rider, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Miami’s Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Studies.

Past research had generally tracked leatherbacks (Dermochelys coriacea) in the South Atlantic Bight and Mid-Atlantic. But in a study published in Frontiers in Marine Science, Rider and his colleagues wanted to get more specific information on where leatherbacks forage along the continental shelf. That information could help them find out in the future where they might overlap with wind farm lease areas.

A leatherback turtle swims away after being outfitted with an advanced satellite tag that records location, depth and temperature data. Credit: NOAA Fisheries Permit #21233

Between 2017 and 2022, with the help of spotters flying overhead, the researchers caught and tagged leatherbacks off the coast of New England and North Carolina. The satellite-based tags not only tracked them where the turtles were swimming. They also recorded water temperature and depth, helping Rider’s team determine when the turtles were diving for food and when temperatures were optimal for various prey.

The findings helped give them more specifics about where the turtles were feeding.

“We now have more concrete evidence that the waters off Nantucket are a huge feeding area for leatherbacks,” said Rider, who studies the turtles with the NOAA Southeast and Northeast Fisheries Science Centers. The team also discovered the turtles spending time in the Long Island Sound. Rider said they could be getting caught off course there—there has been stranding evidence there—or it’s possible they are feeding on jellyfish in the area, as some studies suggest. Both of those areas have leases for wind projects.

Another major area of turtle feeding was between Cape Hatteras to the mouth of the Delaware Bay—an area that also includes potential offshore wind projects off the coast of Virginia. “There’s evidence of jellyfish blooms in that area,” he said. A type of jellyfish known as the sea nettle (Chrysaora quinquecirrha) is also likely getting pushed out of the Chesapeake Bay into the open ocean, where the turtles are taking advantage of them, Rider said.

Foraging may also be taking place—and nesting definitely occurs—off the coast of Florida, Georgia and South Carolina, they found.

“We’re just establishing a baseline for where the leatherbacks are,” Rider said.

Could a virus end an amphibian pandemic?

A fungal disease has devastated amphibian populations around the world, but researchers believe they have discovered a virus that could attack the fungus and put an end to the pandemic.

In a study published in Current Biology, biologists describe the discovery of a virus that infects the Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis fungus, or Bd. They believe it could be engineered to combat the disease.

Bd has contributed to the decline of over 500 amphibian species, and 90 possible extinctions including the yellow-legged mountain frog (Rana muscosa) in the Sierras and the Panamanian golden frog (Atelopus zeteki).

Researchers discovered the virus when they were studying the genetics of the fungus and found some DNA sequences bore the hallmarks of a viral genome. They hope to clone the virus and see if a manually infected strain of Bd produces fewer spores.

“We are hoping to assist nature in taking its course,” said study author Mark Yacoub, a microbiology doctoral student at the University of California, Riverside.

Read more from the University of California, Riverside.

TWS comments on biodiversity-focused National Wildlife Refuge System management

The Wildlife Society commented on the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s proposed policy changes and new regulations that take into account climate change and habitat loss in the management of the National Wildlife Refuge System (NWRS).

The USFWS seeks public comment on proposed revisions to existing policy and new regulations aimed at maintaining, restoring and enhancing the biological integrity, diversity and environmental health—or BIDEH—of the NWRS. The regulations and updated policy aim to address current conservation challenges and ensure the BIDEH of the Refuge System amidst increasing threats to global biodiversity. The Wildlife Society recently submitted its feedback supporting revisions that acknowledge climate change and habitat loss as pivotal factors in refuge management but also highlighted areas for improvement.

The USFWS issued the original BIDEH policy for the NWRS in 2001, providing guidance for maintaining the ecological integrity of the Refuge System. The agency is proposing updates to management directives and definitions in the current policy to better reflect the interconnected nature of refuge ecosystems and the challenges that threats like climate change pose. In the revised policy, refuge managers are directed to prioritize natural processes, ecological connectivity, and adaptation strategies in habitat management.

TWS recognizes the global threat to biodiversity and supports the intent of the USFWS policy revisions to better conserve and manage BIDEH across the National Wildlife Refuge System. In its comments to the USFWS, TWS emphasized the importance of adaptively managing novel ecosystems and incorporating flexibility into management plans, aligning with the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework of management.

TWS also voiced its support for the directive to address climate change across the NWRS, emphasizing the significant impacts of human-caused climate change on wildlife populations. The Society’s comments also stressed the importance of retaining prescribed fire as a critical management tool for maintaining and restoring ecosystems, suggesting that specific language in the policy may unnecessarily limit refuge managers’ ability to effectively use prescribed fire.

The revised BIDEH policy and corresponding regulations also outline management activities intended to enhance BIDEH across the Refuge System. These include native predator control, conservation translocations, the use of genetically engineered organisms, invasive species management, pesticide use, agricultural uses and mosquito control.

In response, TWS expressed concerns over the lack of clarity in defining “predator” and “native,” advocating for ecologically based definitions to guide wildlife management decisions across NWRS refuges. The Society further advocated for a science-based approach to decision-making, flexibility in managing BIDEH while considering the needs of individual refugees, and greater staff capacity for conservation planning.

The Refuge System is administered under various acts, including the Wilderness Act of 1964, the National Wildlife Refuge System Administration Act of 1966, the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act of 1980, and the National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act of 1997. With over 850 million acres of federal lands and waters exclusively dedicated to wildlife conservation, the Refuge System is vital to preserving biodiversity nationwide.

“National wildlife refuges help connect Americans to a diverse array of public lands, while also serving as a crucial means of protecting wildlife and conserving habitat,” said Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland in a press release.

The public can submit comments on the proposed rule and revisions to USFWS by an updated extended deadline of May 6, 2024. TWS continues to support the planning, funding, and management of wildlife refuges as a Cooperative Alliance for Refuge Enhancement (CARE) member.

This article was updated on 4/11/2024 to clarify TWS’ position on the proposed policy.