MDIFW Blog

Duck Box Maintenance

[caption id="attachment_357" align="alignleft" width="225"] One of the duck boxes on the Gregg Sanborn (Brownfield) WMA[/caption] Wildlife biologists are taking advantage of the thick ice and cooler temperatures this time of year to investigate activity that may have occurred

Did you know...

[caption id="attachment_589" align="alignleft" width="306"] Black bear with cub[/caption] Bears are not true hibernators? A true hibernator, like a chipmunk, enters a state of hibernation and then will not wake until their biological clock tells them to, regardless of external stimuli. Bears do not hibernate.

Big Reed and Wadleigh Reclamation Updates

[caption id="attachment_245" align="alignright" width="240"] In the spring of 2010, fisheries biologists used trap nets to help determine the severity of the situation at Wadleigh Pond.

Why Do You Separate Eggs In The Hatchery?

[caption id="attachment_63" align="alignright" width="150"] Wonka's Egg-Dicator[/caption] Willie Wonka, you may remember, possessed an Egg-dicator at his chocolate factory.

Hibernating Herpetofauna

[caption id="attachment_235" align="alignleft" width="240"] A bull frog perches on a rock enjoying the sun.[/caption] Herpetofauna is a term referring to reptiles and amphibians as one group. Often it is shortened to just ‘herps’.

How Do IFW Hatcheries Help Salmon Spawn?

It’s probably not the image you have in your head when you think of salmon spawning, for it is not the majestic leap from pool to pool as a salmon migrates upriver to spawn.  [caption id="attachment_44" align="alignright" width="240"]

Collecting Deer Data - Part 1

The firearms season on deer is in full swing and while hunters scramble seeking deer, biologists scramble seeking successful hunters. During the month of November, wildlife biologists across the state are in a frantic race to collect as much biological data as possible from harvested deer; to do this they are making regular visits to tagging stations and meat processors. Don’t be surprised if they also show up on your door step. The first step to bulk data collection is getting to know the people who handle deer every day all season: the processors.

Collecting Deer Data - Part 2

In the first post about deer bio-data collection, I talked about where wildlife biologists go to collect information and measurements from harvested deer. In this part, I’ll tell you what measurements and samples we collect and why. The first thing the biologist takes note of is the seal number. This is the seven digit number on the registration tag which is affixed to the animal at the tagging station. This number provides an easy way to keep all of the samples and meat connected to the specific deer organized.

Biologists gather data from dead deer to monitor health of the deer herd

While many of us are out hunting this deer season, Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife regional wildlife biologists are busy hunting for deer as well, knocking on doors and visiting meat lockers, chasing down biological data that will give the department a better glimpse of the health of Maine’s deer herd.

Brown Trout Get Radio Tags

Once a nationally renowned brown trout fishery, the tailwaters around Shawmut Hydroelectric Project, referred to as Shawmut, have hastily [caption id="attachment_218" align="alignright" width="240"] One of the tagged brown trout post surgery.