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Thursday, December 31, 2015

Harbor Seal Pup

From USFWS National Wildlife Refuge System:




The third place winner in the 2015 National Wildlife Refuge Association contest is Steve Dimock, for this shot of a harbor seal pup at Oregon Islands National Wildlife Refuge, OR. See all the winning photos herehttp://bit.ly/1NLcKmD and contests you can enter herefws.gov/refuges/photography/photographyContests.html

Most Popular Post from Glacier Lake National Park in 2015

From the U.S. Department of the Interior:




What better way to end the year than sharing our most popular post in 2015: This dreamy shot of Glacier National Park in Montana. More than 272,000 of you liked this beautiful photo of a doe on the banks of Glacier’s Bowman Lake from this summer. Of the image, photographer Kevin LeFevre says: "While shooting the sunrise at Bowman Lake, we were graced with this meandering doe. I scrambled to change my camera settings to accommodate the movement and pulled off this solitary photo. A once in a lifetime." Photo courtesy of Kevin Lefevre. Thanks to all of you for making 2015 a great year, and from all of us at Interior, have a safe and happy new year! — at Glacier National Park.

Celebrating Sea Turtles

From NOAA Fisheries Service:




On the last day of 2015, we give you the #1 most popular story from this year—Celebrating Sea Turtles—part of our Sea Turtle Week in June.1.usa.gov/1PthL5C

Thank you for joining us to celebrate and support these magnificent marine reptiles. If you missed it, check out our sea turtle page and video here:http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/stories/2015/06/seaturtles_2015.html

Happy New Years from NOAA Fisheries—we hope you have a fantastic 2016!


Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Invasive red tail boa constrictor found at nature preserve | Miami Herald



A red tail boa constrictor was found Monday in Robinson Preserve in Northwest Bradenton, Fla.
The snake, estimated between 7 and 8 feet long, is now at Wildlife Inc., an education and rehabilitation center in Bradenton Beach.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/national/article52282610.html#fmp#storylink=cpy


Invasive red tail boa constrictor found at nature preserve | Miami Herald

Cancun Coral Reef - Underwater Art







#Fish #Coral #Reef #CoralReef




Exploring Oceans: Great Barrier Reef







#Fish #Coral #Reef #CoralReef


Diving the Ribbon Reefs on Australia's Great Barrier Reef | underwater f...







#Fish #Coral #Reef #CoralReef


The Coral Reef [In 1080p]







#Fish #Coral #Reef #CoralReef #Cozumel #angelfish #toadfish



#scorpionfish #filefish #triggerfish #drumfish #barracuda ##cowfish



#snapper




"The Beauty Of Coral Reef" [In 4K/Ultra HD]







#Fish #Coral #Reef #CoralReef


Beautiful Underwater Fishes, Animals, Coral and Sea Creature | Amazing G...







#Fish #Coral #Reef #CoralReef


Maldives Underwater Dive Video Nov 2014 - Coral Reef #1







#Coral #Reef #CoralReef


Sri Lanka,ශ්‍රී ලංකා,Ceylon,Coral Reef (26)







#Coral #Reef #CoralReef


Zenith Anchor Damage - December 8, 2015







#Reef #GrandCayman


Beautiful Coral Reef Tank







#Coral #CoralReef


Hawaii Big Island Coral Reef Life: Stunning!







#Fish #Coral #Reef #CoralReef


Coral Reef Adventure 1-4 HD 720p





#Coral #Reef #CoralReef

#Fish


the great barrier reef documentary







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Adventure coral reef under the sea of Egypt







#Coral #Reef #CoralReef #Ecosystem


RAW: Huge stranded whale rescued from Chilean beach

Life On Coral Reef(Lembeh Strait Diving) [Full HD]







#Coral #Reef #CoralReef


Australia | Coral Reef




#coralreef #marine #ecosystem

Coral/Reef propagation at Tidal Gardens with Blue Zoo TV

Coral reef wonderland - Wild Indonesia - BBC

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Nature's wonders: Coral reefs in HD

Red Sea Coral Reef - Amazing World Under The Red Sea - History Channel HD

What Are Coral Reefs And What's Their Purpose?

BBC HD Great Barrier Reef 1 Nature's miracle

Scuba Diving the Great Barrier Reef Red Sea Egypt Tiran Full HD

Beautiful world of coral reef, fish | Most beautiful great barrier reef

Reef Life of the Andaman (full marine biology documentary)

Deep Ocean ~ Coral Reef Adventure Full Documentary

Exploring the Coral Reef: Learn about Oceans for Kids - FreeSchool

Brook Trout

From Wolf Creek National Fish Hatchery:




STOCKINGS: Wolf Creek National Fish Hatchery staff along with the Kentucky Department of Fish Wildlife Resources stocked 22,025 brook trout into the Cumberland River today.

Respect your eiders.

From U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service:



Rough-legged Hawk

From U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Midwest Region:




Designed to monitor the status and distribution of bird populations across the Western Hemisphere, our refuges partner with The National Audubon Society to conduct Christmas bird counts.

Photo: Rough-legged hawk courtesy of Pat Gaines/Creative Commons. https://flic.kr/p/7o7HXR

Monday, December 28, 2015

Bohemian Waxwings

From the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Midwest Region:




Bohemian waxwings were spotted at Rice Lake National Wildlife Refuge in central Minnesota during this year’s Christmas bird count! These berry-loving birds get their name from their nomadic winter flock movement.

Photo: Bohemian waxwing courtesy of Shawn McCready/Creative Commons. https://flic.kr/p/9tvKUw

Spider Crabs

December 28, 2015

From the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS):




Spider Crabs — This underwater photograph, taken of the seafloor off the coast of Plum Island, New York, shows a group of spider crabs on the seabed characterized by coarse sand, gravelly sediment and shell fragments. This photo was collected as part of a collaborative seafloor mapping program between the USGS and the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection and the National Oceanic andAtmospheric Administration (NOAA) to interpret surficial sea-floor geology in the Long Island Sound to make informed coastal management decisions.

Learn more about the coastal mapping efforts from the USGS Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center at http://woodshole.er.usgs.gov/

#USGS #science #coastal #ocean #underwater#NewYork #crab


Florida wildlife agency may tighten rules for venomous reptiles


State wildlife officials are considering tighter rules for owning venomous reptiles — or possibly banning ownership altogether.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/latest-news/article51774420.html#storylink=cpy

http://www.miamiherald.com/latest-news/article51774420.html

Sunday, December 27, 2015

Unusual Traffic Jam at Yellowstone National Park

From the U.S. Department of the Interior:




This is a different kind of traffic jam at Yellowstone National Park. Bison weigh up to 2,000 lbs and can pack a lot of attitude. They can run up to 35 miles per hour, but these appear to be taking their time. We recommend patience. Photo by Allen Beyer (www.sharetheexperience.org). — at Yellowstone National Park.

Barred Owl

From USFWS National Wildlife Refuge System:




The Barred owl’s hooting call, “Who cooks for you? Who cooks for you-all?” is a classic sound of old forests and treed swamps. Barred owls on Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge, NC, have a wide range of food: mice, opossum, rabbits, squirrels, snakes, frogs, salamanders, beetles, grasshoppers, slugs, fish and a variety of birds. Originally a bird of the East, the barred owl has spread throughout the Pacific Northwest and into California You can visit Alligator River Refuge’s visitor center on Roanoke Island year-round Monday-Saturday, 9 am-4 pm; Sunday, noon-4 pm. 
About Alligator River Refuge: http://1.usa.gov/1BUVIue

Saturday, December 26, 2015

Former Executive Director of Newark Watershed Conservation and Development Corporation Admits Role in Nearly $1 Million Kickback and Fraud Scheme

FBI Newark Division #News Release:


Former Executive Director of Newark Watershed Conservation and Development Corporation Admits Role in Nearly $1 Million Kickback and Fraud Scheme

U.S. Attorney’s OfficeDecember 21, 2015
  • District of New Jersey(973) 645-2888
NEWARK, NJ—The former executive director of the Newark Watershed Conservation and Development Corp. (NWCDC) today admitted accepting approximately $999,000 in kickback payments in exchange for her assistance in awarding work to various vendors and contractors of the agency, U.S. Attorney Paul J. Fishman announced.
Linda Watkins Brashear, 56, of West Orange, New Jersey, pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge José Linares in Newark federal court to Counts 1 and 5 of a five-count information charging her with a wire fraud scheme to defraud the NWCDC by accepting bribes and kickback payments from contractors and an employee of the corporation, which were funded by payments from the NWCDC based on fraudulently inflated invoices or issued for work that was not performed by the contractors (Count 1), and subscribing a false tax return for the year 2012 (Count 5).
According to documents filed in this case and statements made in court:
Brashear served as the executive director for the NWCDC from 2007 to March 2013. During this time, she and others devised a scheme to defraud the NWCDC of her honest services in the affairs of the NWCDC and of the NWCDC’s money and property. The object of the scheme was for Brashear and others to accept a substantial stream of concealed and undisclosed kickbacks from NWCDC contractors and an employee of the NWCDC for her direct and indirect benefit in exchange for action and assistance in the affairs of the NWCDC, and for her violating her official duties and responsibilities.
Between 2008 and March 2013, Brashear accepted approximately $999,000, in kickbacks financed through the receipt of payments by contractors and an employee of the NWCDC that were fraudulently obtained from the NWCDC with Brashear’s assistance, through materially false pretenses, representations and promises. In particular, Brashear accepted kickbacks as summarized below:
TIME PERIODAPPROXIMATE AMOUNT OF KICKBACKSPAID BY
September 2012—March 2013$39,000NWCDC “Employee 1”
January 2009—December 2012$260,000James Porter (identified in Count 1 as “partner of the special projects manager”)
January 2008—June 2012$70,000Printing contractor
January 2011—January 2013$33,000Marketing contractor
September 2012—April 2013$90,000Cleaning contractor
April 2009—February 2013$118,000Homeland Security contractor
January 2009—May 2012$40,000Interior designer
January 2008—March 2013$177,000Internet research consultant
October 2011—March 2013$29,000Political consultant
April 2011—September 2012$32,000Media consultant
January 2008—March 2013$27,000Giacomo “Jack” DeRosa
May 2011—March 2013$84,000Security consultant
Brashear routinely accepted payments from some of these contractors through Donald Bernard Sr. Brashear and Bernard also used their e-mail accounts to facilitate this kickback and fraud scheme. Bernard was previously charged in December 2014 in a 20-count indictment with various federal offenses involving a scheme to defraud the NWCDC of his honest services and the NWCDC’s money and property by accepting and agreeing to accept bribes and kickbacks from certain NWCDC contractors, which were financed at least in part through the contractors’ fraudulent padding of invoices to the NWCDC.
Brashear admitted taking payments from James Porter, a contractor who pleaded guilty in January 2015 to conspiracy to defraud the NWCDC of honest services, money and property through the use of interstate wire transmissions, as well as tax evasion for his role in the kickback scheme. The roofing contractor referred to in Count 1 of the information, Giacomo “Jack” DeRosa, was charged in a six-count fraud and money laundering indictment in December 2014 for his role in passing kickbacks to Bernard, which were shared, in part, with Brashear.
Brashear also admitted making and subscribing a U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, Form 1040, for tax year 2012, signed and filed with the IRS under penalty of perjury, which she did not believe to be true and correct, including approximately $316,000 in unreported income that she received through the kickback payments.
The wire fraud charge to which Brashear pleaded guilty carries a maximum potential penalty of 20 years in prison. The charge of filing a false tax return carries a maximum potential penalty of three years in prison. Both charges are punishable by a fine of $250,000 or twice the amount of the pecuniary gain or loss from the offense. Sentencing is scheduled for April 5, 2016.
U.S. Attorney Fishman credited special agents of the FBI’s Newark Field Office, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge Richard M. Frankel; IRS—Criminal Investigation, Newark Field Office, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge Jonathan D. Larsen; and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Inspector General, Newark office, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge Christina Scaringi, as well as criminal investigators of the U.S. Attorney’s Office, for the investigation leading to today’s guilty plea. U.S. Attorney Fishman also thanked the N.J. Office of the State Comptroller, under the direction of Acting State Comptroller Philip James Degnan, for its assistance in the investigation.
The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jacques Pierre, Mala Ahuja Harker and Leslie Schwartz of the U.S. Attorney’s Office Special Prosecutions Division.
Defense counsel: Michael Baldassare Esq., Newark
This content has been reproduced from its original source.

Endangered Nēnē Geese

From USFWS National Wildlife Refuge System:




This family of four endangered nēnē geese has been seen foraging behind the Visitor Center at Kilauea Point National Wildlife Refuge, HI. In 2014, the refuge built a 2,390-foot predator-proof fence to create an area protected from the damaging effects of cats, dogs, rodents and mongoose on the nēnē and other species. The nēnē is the official bird of the state of Hawaii and found exclusively in the wild on the islands of Oahu, Maui, Kaua’I and Hawai’i.

Photo by K. Viernes, Kilauea Point National Historic Association 
About Kilauea Point Refuge: http://1.usa.gov/1986p3O

Thursday, December 24, 2015

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Seen at #ButterflyWonderland, Scottsdale, #Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at #ButterflyWonderland, Scottsdale, #Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at #ButterflyWonderland, Scottsdale, #Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at #ButterflyWonderland, Scottsdale, #Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

Puerto Rico’s Government to Make Major Upgrades to San Juan Water Infrastructure in Settlement with the Federal Government

EPA Press Release:


Puerto Rico’s Government to Make Major Upgrades to San Juan
Water Infrastructure in Settlement with the Federal Government

Contact: John Martin, (212) 637-3662, martin.johnj@epa.gov; Brenda Reyes, (787) 977-5869, reyes.brenda@epa.gov

(New York, N.Y. – December 23, 2015) Under two settlements with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Department of Justice, three Puerto Rico government agencies have agreed to upgrade portions of storm water systems they own within the Municipality of San Juan. These upgrades, which will be performed by the Department of Natural and Environmental Resources, the Department of Transportation and Public Works from the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and the Puerto Rico Highways and Transportation Authority, are aimed at eliminating or minimizing future discharges of sewage and other pollutants into water bodies in and around San Juan, including the Condado Lagoon, the Martin Peña Channel, and the Atlantic Ocean. The EPA estimates that over 6 million gallons of untreated sewage is being discharged into waterways in and around San Juan every day which amounts to more than 2.2 billion gallons discharged annually.

“For far too long, harmful discharges of sewage and other contaminants have polluted water bodies in communities in Puerto Rico,” said EPA Regional Administrator Judith A. Enck. “These legal agreements will drive water quality improvements and protect the health of the people of Puerto Rico.”

“These structural and operational improvements to the storm water infrastructure are critical and desperately needed for the public health and well-being of San Juan’s residents,” said Assistant Attorney General John C. Cruden for the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division. “This agreement will improve storm water collection systems that will reduce contamination from sewage that is presently escaping into water bodies around the city each day.”

The Puerto Rico agencies will invest an estimated $77 million in infrastructure upgrades and other actions over the life of the two legal agreements. The settlements are related to an agreement with the Municipality of San Juan that was announced on October 26, 2015 in which San Juan agreed to take actions to upgrade its separate storm sewer system.

Stormwater runoff in San Juan is collected through municipal separate storm sewer systems and is discharged into local waterways. When rain falls on roofs, streets and parking lots, the water cannot soak into the ground and carries trash, bacteria, heavy metals and other pollutants into streams, threatening public health. In addition, property and infrastructure can be damaged by storm water runoff due to erosion. Additionally, sanitary sewer lines or industrial discharges can also be illegally connected to the storm sewer, leading to untreated sewage or other pollutants reaching water bodies.

Between 2005 and 2013, the EPA documented that the Puerto Rico agencies were discharging untreated sewage and other pollutants from their storm sewer systems into water bodies, in violation of the Clean Water Act. The waters receiving the untreated sewage include those that are classified for activities where people may come into contact with the water, such as fishing, boating, swimming, wading and/or other recreational and commercial activities. Untreated sewage can carry bacteria, viruses and other harmful pollutants that can cause a number of illnesses. Direct and indirect human exposure to or contact with untreated sewage and contaminated waters discharged on a daily basis presents an imminent and substantial endangerment to human health and welfare.

The EPA waived the collection of any monetary civil penalties due to financial challenges currently facing the Puerto Rico government; however, the agreements will include financial penalties if the agencies fail to complete the work and meet the deadlines.

In the complaint filed in 2014, the EPA alleges that the Puerto Rico Department of Natural and Environmental Resources was discharging pollutants without a permit from its Baldorioty de Castro, De Diego and Stop 18 stormwater pump stations. These three pump stations were designed to control flooding in the San Juan area by pumping large volumes of storm water into receiving waters. These three Department of Natural and Environmental Resources pump stations have been receiving flow from various sources which contain untreated sewage. The agreement with the Department of Natural and Environmental Resources requires it to invest an estimated $33 million to upgrade its system over the life of the settlement, including:

  • Obtain a proper permit and implement a Storm Water Management Program.
  • Install, inspect, maintain, monitor, and replace warning signs at all pump station outfalls and replace booms at all pump stations.
  • Upgrade the Baldorioty de Castro Pump Station, and install electronic monitoring equipment and lighting fixtures at pump station wet wells.
  • Routinely clean and maintain its pump stations and develop methods for sludge sampling, disposal, and water level management.
  • Develop a Spill Prevention Control and Countermeasures Plan.
  • Pay $650,000 each year into a Court Registry Account to be used by the Municipality of San Juan, Department of Transportation and Public Works and the Highways and Transportation Authority to support the implementation of work plans for work in the collection systems that flow to DNER’s three pump stations.
The EPA also alleges that the Puerto Rico Department of Transportation and Public Works and the Puerto Rico Highway and Transportation Authority was discharging storm water containing untreated sewage through the storm water systems they own and operate to provide drainage for their roads and highways. Flow from these systems is conveyed to the Department of Natural and Environmental Resources’ pump stations. Under a legal agreement, the Puerto Rico Department of Transportation and Public Works and the Puerto Rico Highways and Transportation Authority will invest an estimated $44 million over the life of the agreement to:
  • Comply with the permit and develop and implement a Storm Water Management Program.
  • Eliminate all illegal connections and discharges to their storm water systems under an EPA-approved schedule.
  • Address complaints from residents and government agencies by developing a registry of complaints of illegal discharges into their storm water systems and address those complaints.
  • Install, inspect, maintain, monitor, and/or replace warning signs at outfalls.
  • Submit a vacuum truck sludge disposal plan and submit standard operating procedures for pump stations.
  • HTA must investigate the Barrio Obrero Vacuum Sewer System, and either enter into an agreement to transfer the system to PRASA, or repair the system.
  • Develop a program, subject to EPA review, to inspect, clean and repair the storm water system.
  • Develop plans to prevent and respond to spills.
  • Sample water quality at all outfalls and maintain outfall information.
  • Complete an inventory of all of outfalls in the city of San Juan.
  • Actively identify ways to incorporate green infrastructure into plans to comply with the agreement.
The settlement, lodged today in the U.S. District Court for the District of Puerto Rico, is subject to a 30-day public comment period and approval by the federal court. The settlement will be available for viewing at www.justice.gov/enrd/Consent_Decrees.html

15-105                                                             # # #

EPA Announces $44 Million to Improve Water Quality, Infrastructure in Arizona, Nevada

EPA News Release:


For Immediate Release:   December 22, 2015

EPA Announces $44 Million to Improve Water Quality, Infrastructure in Arizona, Nevada

SAN FRANCISCO – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced $44 million in funding to Arizona and Nevada for investment in statewide improvements in local drinking water and wastewater infrastructure and the reduction of water pollution.

“This substantial investment at the federal level helps communities develop the infrastructure needed for clean, safe drinking water and proper wastewater treatment,” said Jared Blumenfeld, EPA’s Regional Administrator for the Pacific Southwest. “EPA is committed to protecting the water resources so important to public health and local economies.”

Funds provided will go to a variety of water quality infrastructure improvement projects throughout Arizona and Nevada, with an emphasis on small and disadvantaged communities and projects that promote sustainability. Drinking Water SRF money funds public and private community and non-community water systems to support projects such as treatment, distribution, transmission, source, and storage infrastructure. Clean Water SRF money is used for publicly owned municipal wastewater system projects that would build or improve treatment plants, sewer collection systems, water reuse facilities and stormwater infrastructure.

Some EPA funds are planned to go to a broader range of innovative infrastructure projects to improve the State’s water quality in the face of evolving threats from climate change. Examples include watershed protection, forest restoration, and stormwater management projects that utilize floodplains and natural landscapes to filter pollutants and protect water quality, minimize the area and impacts of floods, reduce the burden on public drainage infrastructure, and increase groundwater recharge.

EPA has awarded $820.3 million in federal funding for Arizona and Nevada’s Clean Water and Drinking Water State Revolving Fund programs since their inception in 1988 and 1996 respectively. The funds are used for a wide variety of water quality projects including watershed protection and restoration, water and energy efficiency, wastewater reclamation, and traditional municipal wastewater treatment systems including nonpoint source pollution control.  The funds also support drinking water infrastructure, as well as drinking water plant operator training, and technical assistance.

The EPA’s Pacific Southwest Region administers and enforces federal environmental laws in Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada, the Pacific Islands and 148 tribal nations—home to more than 48 million people.
For more information on EPA Region 9’s State Revolving Fund program, visit: http://www.epa.gov/region9/water/grants/srf-loan-prog.html

###

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Seen at #ButterflyWonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.





Home for the holidays!

From North Cascades National Park Service Complex:




Home for the holidays! We released four more fishers into the Cascades yesterday, bringing the total to 11!

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

Porcupine Caribou at the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge

From USFWS National Wildlife Refuge System:




Not sure what the reindeer are doing at the North Pole today. At Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, the Porcupine caribou is named for its birthing grounds, the Porcupine River. The caribou’s 1,500-mile annual land migration -- between its winter range in the boreal forests of Alaska and northwest Canada to the coastal plain and its calving grounds on the Beaufort Sea coastal plain -- is the longest of any land mammal. In Eurasia, caribou are known as reindeer. Caribou are well adapted to the cold, with hollow-hair fur that covers almost all of its body – even its nose – and provides insulation in winter and flotation for swimming. Caribou are fast runners; they can reach speeds of almost 50 MPH. The Arctic Refuge is the largest national wildlife refuge in the National Wildlife Refuge System. 

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

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Seen at #ButterflyWonderland, Scottsdale, #Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

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Seen at Butterfly Wonderland, Scottsdale, Arizona. December 4, 2015.




#Butterfly #Insect #Pollinator

Listing the Lion







#USFWS


Hovering Ferruginous Hawk

From U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Mountain-Prairie Region:




DYK: Ferruginous hawks fly into the wind & hover or kite in place as they hunt. They even hunt on the ground.

Snowy Owl

From Great River and Clarence Cannon National Wildlife Refuges:




Our refuge lands are great places to see Snowy Owls visiting for the winter! They have even visited as far south as Clarence Cannon NWR on occasion. Watch for them perching and watching over open fields. Check out the latest sightings: http://bit.ly/1P0klk5

(Photo credit: USFWS Mountain Prairie)

Hoppy holidays!!!

From Saratoga National Fish Hatchery:



Winter wish list: see 150+ eagles at once

From the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service:




Winter wish list: see 150+ eagles at once. 

Throughout winter, bald eagles often congregate at communal roosts and feeding sites. This one was taken on the Nooksack River in Washington byKamriell Welty Photography. How many can you count?

For more info on bald eagle communal roosts and what it's like to see one: http://1.usa.gov/1QLyti3

Ferruginous Hawk Chicks

From the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Mountain-Prairie Region:




These ferruginous hawk chicks reminded this admin of Christmas Eve when just about every kid asks their mom,"Can we open up just one present on Christmas Eve?!? Just one, please!!!!" 

Photo Credit: Bureau of Land Management - Idaho