Photo By/Credit
Hillebrand, Steve/USFWS
Date Shot/Created
08/15/2006Media Usage Rights/License
Public Domain
Image
This is a picture of four U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologists reviewing data around a table. The Alaska Highway is the northern boundary of the 682,604 acre Tetlin Refuge for 65 miles northwest of Alaska-Yukon border. From scenic overlooks you can view wetlands important to breeding waterfowl, and boreal forests and alpine habitats important to moose, caribou, grizzly and black bears, wolves and Dall sheep. The preservation of these lands for wildlife represent the legacy of early conservationists. Our responsibility is to bequeath these lands and the animals living here to future generations. Perhaps our challenge is best underscored by the words of President Theodore Roosevelt: “Wild beasts and birds are by right not the property merely of the people who are alive today, but the property of unknown generations, whose belongings we have no right to squander." On behalf of the refuge staff and the community of Tok, I hope that you will come and visit us at the Tetlin National Wildlife Refuge. It’s a special place we can all share.
Facility
