-
0
1637
Like
0 people like this
CDFW scientists Richard Callas and Scott Hill release a fisher onto Sierra Pacific Industries’ Stirling Management Area.
-
0
1525
Like
0 people like this
Aaron Facka checks a live trap set in Siskiyou County to capture fisher for release in the northern Sierra Nevada.
-
0
1481
Like
0 people like this
CDFW’s Shelly Blair holds a tranquilized male fisher in the Department’s mobile wildlife laboratory.
-
0
1471
Like
0 people like this
A fisher in a handling cone used to safely restrain animals so they can be tranquilized, equipped with a radio transmitter, and tested for disease.
-
0
1463
Like
0 people like this
View into a transport box which is divided in two sections for feeding and sleeping.
-
0
1392
Like
0 people like this
A male fisher peeks out of a transport box at the release site.
-
0
1388
Like
0 people like this
-
0
1382
Like
0 people like this
A tranquilized female fisher and implantable radio-transmitter (white cylinder).
-
0
1365
Like
0 people like this
US Fish and Wildlife Service Biologist Scott Yaeger and DFG Senior Environmental Scientist Richard Callas prepare to coax a fisher into a handling cone.
-
0
1365
Like
0 people like this
-
0
1361
Like
0 people like this
-
0
1346
Like
0 people like this
A male fisher photographed at a camera station near Stirling.
-
0
1345
Like
0 people like this
A female fisher carrying a kit within the Stirling Management Area. Although this female, as well as others released this winter have occupied dens, this is the first photographic documentation that reproduction has occurred.
-
0
1336
Like
0 people like this
CDFW Veterinarian Deana Clifford surgically implants a light-weight radio transmitter into the abdomen of a female fisher.
-
0
1335
Like
0 people like this
Fishers in transport boxes (one fisher per box) in transit to Sierra Pacific Industries’ Stirling Management Area.
-
0
1325
Like
0 people like this
A den in a Douglas-fir used by a female fisher in April 2010.
-
0
1315
Like
0 people like this
An incense cedar den tree used by a female fisher in April 2010.
-
0
1307
Like
0 people like this
A female fisher moving a kit to a new den.
-
0
1295
Like
0 people like this
-
0
1291
Like
0 people like this
A female fisher bringing quite a large gray squirrel back to her den.
-
0
1233
Like
0 people like this
-
0
1190
Like
0 people like this
CDFW scientists Richard Callas and Scott Hill release a fisher onto Sierra Pacific Industries’ Stirling Management Area.
Aaron Facka checks a live trap set in Siskiyou County to capture fisher for release in the northern Sierra Nevada.
CDFW’s Shelly Blair holds a tranquilized male fisher in the Department’s mobile wildlife laboratory.
A fisher in a handling cone used to safely restrain animals so they can be tranquilized, equipped with a radio transmitter, and tested for disease.
View into a transport box which is divided in two sections for feeding and sleeping.
A male fisher peeks out of a transport box at the release site.
A tranquilized female fisher and implantable radio-transmitter (white cylinder).
US Fish and Wildlife Service Biologist Scott Yaeger and DFG Senior Environmental Scientist Richard Callas prepare to coax a fisher into a handling cone.
A male fisher photographed at a camera station near Stirling.
A female fisher carrying a kit within the Stirling Management Area. Although this female, as well as others released this winter have occupied dens, this is the first photographic documentation that reproduction has occurred.
CDFW Veterinarian Deana Clifford surgically implants a light-weight radio transmitter into the abdomen of a female fisher.
Fishers in transport boxes (one fisher per box) in transit to Sierra Pacific Industries’ Stirling Management Area.
A den in a Douglas-fir used by a female fisher in April 2010.
An incense cedar den tree used by a female fisher in April 2010.
A female fisher moving a kit to a new den.
A female fisher bringing quite a large gray squirrel back to her den.