Our work in Puerto Rico is diverse, all in support of wildlife conservation. Your support to the National Wildlife Refuge Association allows us to hire professional staff that can provide technical and administrative support to the National Wildlife Refuge System and adjoining lands to help protect and conserve critical habitats and endangered species.
Let's Celebrate Polar Bear Week By Protecting Polar Bears & Their Habitat
This week is Polar Bear Week - a great way to celebrate this iconic, magnificent, and unfortunately threatened species. Prior to my current job as the President of the National Wildlife Refuge Association, I served as the Alaska Regional Director for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. As part of that job, I was appointed by both Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama as the United States Polar Bear Commissioner.
NWRA Heads to Seattle and Olympia in Washington
The National Wildlife Refuge Association’s staff and board members recently attended their biannual board meeting in Olympia, Washington and a fundraising event in Seattle, Washington. They ended the trip with a visit with USFWS staff at Billy Frank Jr. Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge. It was a very successful and productive trip!
Combating Kudzu With An Unlikely Management Technique
Despite woeful budgets, hundreds of staff vacancies, and the repeated weakening of many environmental safeguards, the work of the National Wildlife Refuge System goes on!
On a recent September day, I joined Refuge System staff and one other volunteer, who happens to be my son, to combat kudzu at the Rappahannock River Valley National Wildlife Refuge in Virginia. Kudzu is a highly invasive plant that if left unchecked will smother anything and everything in its path, and quickly. Over the past three years, the Refuge has employed the full arsenal of control methods to combat this species. These include mowing, hand cutting, herbicide application, prescribed burning, and, wait for it, goats! Turns out that goats love kudzu. This should come as no surprise since one of the early promotions for this introduced plant was as cattle fodder. It was also promoted by the Federal government to control erosion. If only we knew then what we know now about the potentially harmful effects of introducing non-native species. But what’s done is done, and Refuge staff continue to face the challenge head on, taking all the help they can get from volunteers and interns.
The spread of invasive species is but one of the challenges facing the Refuge System today and into the future. This is no time to shrink from our responsibilities to protect our planet and our life-sustaining natural resources.
The National Wildlife Refuge System is up for it, the National Wildlife Refuge Association is up for it, are you up for it?
Written by the Refuge Association’s own Joe McCauley, Regional Representative, Northeast Region
Photo: Kudzu at the Hutchinson Unit of Rappahannock River Valley National Wildlife Refuge by Joe McCauley
Sunset At The Refuge
We all know that our National Wildlife Refuge system provides some of the finest opportunities for viewing wildlife and the plants and other biodiversity that make up their habitats, but I would argue that it can be a serious mistake to head home prematurely after a day of hunting, birdwatching, or photographing, as refuges also provide some of the best sunset watching opportunities anywhere.
New Tools For Invasive Species Management On National Wildlife Refuges
Invasive plant species threaten ecosystems across the US and, if left uncontrolled, can quickly degrade wildlife habitat. The US Fish and Wildlife Service has adopted various strategies for better addressing this threat and recently held several weed prioritization workshops across the Mid-Columbia River and Central Washington national wildlife refuge complexes.