2023 Share with Wildlife Projects
Category | Title |
Research | Assessing the status, distribution, movement corridors and foraging habitat requirements of nectar bats in New Mexico through eDNA, PIT tagging and diet analysis |
Research | Assessing the effects of forest management and wildfire on populations of New Mexico’s endemic salamanders |
Research | Inferring brown-capped rosy-finch demography and breeding distribution trends from long-term wintering data in New Mexico |
Research | An updated status and distribution of the northern leopard frog (Lithobates pipiens) in New Mexico. |
Research | Pinyon jay surveys in the Gila National Forest |
Research | Post-wildfire habitat use by the Peñasco least chipmunk |
Habitat | Identifying and mapping climatically stable macro- and micro-refugia in New Mexico |
Rehabilitation | New Mexico Wildlife Center |
Rehabilitation | Desert Willow Wildlife Rehabilitation Center |
Highlighted Report
Virginia Tech, with support from the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies and New Mexico Department of Game and Fish, conducted a survey of wildlife viewers in New Mexico. Wildlife viewing is among the fastest growing outdoor recreation activities in the United States, with significant implications for the work of wildlife agencies. The final report describing results of this survey provides agencies with valuable information about wildlife viewers’ behaviors, experiences, perceptions, needs, and preferences. This information is essential for more meaningful and substantive engagement by state agencies with this often underserved constituency.
Reports
To access other project reports, please visit the Share with Wildlife search on the BISON-M website:
https://bison-m.org/contractsearch.aspx.