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SE Firemap Slide
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Slide for SE Firemap
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SE Grasslands Institute
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Southeastern Grasslands Institute
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Searching for birds and discussing high-elevation conservation at Mount Mitchell
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As part of a recent visit to western North Carolina, leadership from the Fish and Wildlife Service’s southeastern regional office in Atlanta had an opportunity to visit a pair of places that are key to the Service’s conservation efforts – the streams of the Upper Nolichucky River valley, home to the Eastern hellbender and endangered Appalachian elktoe; and the summit of Mount Mitchell, one of many high-elevation peaks in the Southern Appalachians that are home to species found no-where else.
Photo credit: Gary Peeples/USFWS. Photo used behind Expertise Search block on Homepage
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Sheep Herder
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Dominique Herman leads a flock of Corriedale Merino cross and Ike-de-France Merino cross to pasture for morning grazing on her farm in Warwick, New York.
(USDA/FPAC photo by Preston Keres)
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Southeast Region
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Firemap of SE Region
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Spring 2016 Newsletter
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PDF version of the spring newsletter
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Newsletter
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Steering Committee Group
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Group photo of steering committee members
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Stream USDA-Flickr
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A stream flows through the Whitetall Mountains in the Butte Ranger District of Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest Montana, September 13, 2019.USDA Photo by Preston Keres
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Sue Cameron downloading data from a tree-mounted data logger
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The spruce-fir moss spider is an endangered animal found only on the highest peaks of the Southern Appalachians. As its name implies, it lives in moss mats on the forest floor beneath the spruce-fir forest canopy. Even in that limited habitat, it is very particular about the type of moss it lives in.
Sue Cameron is the Service expert for this species, and she recently visited Mount Mitchell State Park to search for the spider, and download humidity and temperature from data loggers that are continually recording the environmental data that may guide future management efforts.
Credit: G. Peeples/USFWS. Image used for Issue banner.
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Sue Fruchey Taking Notes
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Sue Fruchey taking notes
Botanists with the Fish and Wildlife Service and U.S. Forest Service recently visited the Linville Gorge area of Pisgah National Forest to monitor the threatened mountain golden heather and it’s response to recent fire. The plant is adapted to fire, which biologists believe helps control the plant’s competitors. A significant threat at heavily-visited sites is simple trampling by hikers and rock climbers unaware of the plant under their feet and its significance.
One way you can help mountain golden heather is joining countless hikers in heeding area-closed signs on public lands, which often mark fragile habitats or species easily damaged by foot traffic.
Photo credit: Gary Peeples/USFWS
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