Northeast Region
Conserving the Nature of America
Adult bald eagle killed by poison in November.
Adult bald eagle killed by poison in November.USFWS

Poison kills 2 bald eagles, sickens 3 more in Maryland

A reward of up to $3,500 is offered for information leading to a conviction for the poisoning of five bald eagles in Talbot County, Maryland. The eagles were found Nov. 20, having apparently fed on a poisoned fox carcass. Bald eagles are protected by both the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act and the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. Click Learn More for high-res images.

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Blackpoll warbler, USFWS photo
Blackpoll warblers are among thousands of songbirds traveling a popular flyway over Maine's coastal island refuges. USFWS photo

Researchers find migratory bird thoroughfare across Gulf of Maine

Researchers believe they may have discovered a previously unknown, but potentially very important, flyway that songbirds are using as a short cut across the Gulf of Maine during fall migration. During a recent bird banding study on several Maine coastal national wildlife refuge islands, more than 5,500 songbirds representing 75 species were captured, far exceeding the numbers of birds captured at long-running banding stations elsewhere.

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Photo courtesy George Davis, Tri-City Florist
Photo courtesy George Davis, Tri-City Florist

Owl seeks Service assistance

An injured great-horned owl turned up on the doorstep of the Richmond, Va., U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service office. The bird could not fly and is now in the care of a rehabilitator, who expects a complete recovery.

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Elk River. Photo courtesy of R. Tom Sizemore, III, MD
Elk River. Photo courtesy of R. Tom Sizemore, III, MD

West Virginia fish now a candidate for ESA protection

The Service has added the diamond darter, a small fish found only in the Elk River in West Virginia, to its list of candidates for Endangered Species Act protection with a priority of 2 on a 12-point scale for ESA protection. Other candidates in the Northeast Region and their priorities are: bog asphodel (8), Hirsts' panic grass (5), New England cottontail (2), and red knot (3) Priorities are based on threats to the species' continued survival and their taxonomy. Although the Service has enough information on these species to propose protecting them, higher priorities preclude that action.

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Little brown bats with white-nose syndrome, New York  Credit: Photo courtesy Nancy Heaslip, New York Department of Environmental Conservation
White-Nose
Syndrome In Bats


American Recovery and Reinvestment ActRecovery Act
at Work

Rehabilitation of Monomoy Lighthouse
(FFS# R5BB)

Where: Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge, Massachusetts

What's Happening: We will use Recovery Act funding to repair a lighthouse and its outbuildings on Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge on Cape Cod. The project will restore the historic integrity and structural soundness of the lighthouse, its living quarters and oil shed, all of which are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The improvements will provide a base of operations for conducting wildlife surveys and management activities on the refuge, as well as public access to the lighthouse for educational and scientific programs.

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Let's Go Outside, the logo of the Service's Children and Nature Program
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Partners in Amphibian and Reptile Conservation
Last updated: November 25, 2009