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Photograph of eelgrass researcher at sunrise
Sunrise Sampling
Sunrise Sampling
Sunrise Sampling

Eelgrass (Zostera marina) forms extensive meadows in low intertidal and shallow subtidal areas of estuaries and embayments along the Northwest Atlantic coast. Ranked among the most productive plant communities on the planet, eelgrass beds are noted for contributing valuable ecosystem functions and services to the coastal zone.

Eelgrass (Zostera marina) forms extensive meadows in low intertidal and shallow subtidal areas of estuaries and embayments along the Northwest Atlantic coast. Ranked among the most productive plant communities on the planet, eelgrass beds are noted for contributing valuable ecosystem functions and services to the coastal zone.

Bee marked with tag white 60 on hive frame
Bee marked with tag white 60 on hive frame
Bee marked with tag white 60 on hive frame
Bee marked with tag white 60 on hive frame

Bees tagged to allow researchers to monitoring their foraging behavior.

Associated project title "Impacts of fossil fuel combustion on pollinators"

Bees tagged to allow researchers to monitoring their foraging behavior.

Associated project title "Impacts of fossil fuel combustion on pollinators"

Bee with tag light blue 84 on comb. Bees tagged so researchers can monitor individual bee foraging behavior.
Tagged bee on comb
Tagged bee on comb
Tagged bee on comb

Bee with tag light blue 84 on comb. Bees tagged so researchers can monitor individual bee foraging behavior. 

Bee with tag light blue 84 on comb. Bees tagged so researchers can monitor individual bee foraging behavior. 

Three biologists dressed in outdoor field gear and carrying equipment including a dip net, camera, and bird bands.
Preparing for pelican banding.
Preparing for pelican banding.
Preparing for pelican banding.

Three biologists with the USGS Bird Banding Lab at Patuxent Wildlife Research Center prepare to band pelican chicks on Smith Island in the Chesapeake Bay.

Three biologists with the USGS Bird Banding Lab at Patuxent Wildlife Research Center prepare to band pelican chicks on Smith Island in the Chesapeake Bay.

Two double-crested cormorant chicks in a nest.
Cormorant chicks in nest
Cormorant chicks in nest
Cormorant chicks in nest

Two double-crested cormorant chicks in their nest on Smith Island in the Chesapeake Bay, Maryland.

Two double-crested cormorant chicks in their nest on Smith Island in the Chesapeake Bay, Maryland.

Regular colony checks and monitoring for marked bees.
Bee colony health check
Bee colony health check
Bee colony health check

Researchers monitoring frame for marked bees and colony health.  The associated project is Impacts of fossil fuels on pollinators.

Researchers monitoring frame for marked bees and colony health.  The associated project is Impacts of fossil fuels on pollinators.

Sampling flowers for eDNA extraction to detect pollinator visits.
Sampling flowers for eDNA extraction to detect pollinator visits
Sampling flowers for eDNA extraction to detect pollinator visits
Sampling flowers for eDNA extraction to detect pollinator visits

Johanna Nifosi uses forceps to sample a flower for eDNA extraction in Indiana Dunes National Park. eDNA will be extracted and sequenced for the detection of pollinators such as bees. 

Johanna Nifosi uses forceps to sample a flower for eDNA extraction in Indiana Dunes National Park. eDNA will be extracted and sequenced for the detection of pollinators such as bees. 

Close-up of a honey bee being prepared for testing
Close-up of a honey bee being prepared for testing
Close-up of a honey bee being prepared for testing
Close-up of a honey bee being prepared for testing

Leetown Science Center researcher, Dr. Deborah Iwanowicz, is preparing honey bee for analysis of the Lake Sinai Virus (LSV).   This type of work is important to society as pollinators are critical for sustaining healthy ecosystems and prosperous human populations.

Leetown Science Center researcher, Dr. Deborah Iwanowicz, is preparing honey bee for analysis of the Lake Sinai Virus (LSV).   This type of work is important to society as pollinators are critical for sustaining healthy ecosystems and prosperous human populations.

Close-up photo of pollen for analysis
Close-up photo of pollen for analysis
Close-up photo of pollen for analysis
Close-up photo of pollen for analysis

Leetown Science Center researcher, Dr. Deborah Iwanowicz is collaborating with Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center.  Dr. Clint Otto, who has the lead on a project designed to identify and improve forage for honey bees on USDA Conservation Lands.  Dr.

Leetown Science Center researcher, Dr. Deborah Iwanowicz is collaborating with Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center.  Dr. Clint Otto, who has the lead on a project designed to identify and improve forage for honey bees on USDA Conservation Lands.  Dr.

Honey bees being prepared for Lake Sinai Virus (LSV) testing.
Honey bees being prepared for Lake Sinai Virus (LSV) testing.
Honey bees being prepared for Lake Sinai Virus (LSV) testing.
Honey bees being prepared for Lake Sinai Virus (LSV) testing.

Leetown Science Center researcher, Dr. Deborah Iwanowicz, is preparing honey bees for analysis of the Lake Sinai Virus (LSV).  This type of work is important to society as pollinators are critical for sustaining healthy ecosystems and prosperous human populations.

Leetown Science Center researcher, Dr. Deborah Iwanowicz, is preparing honey bees for analysis of the Lake Sinai Virus (LSV).  This type of work is important to society as pollinators are critical for sustaining healthy ecosystems and prosperous human populations.

Pollen being removed from microcentrifuge tube for plant DNA analysis.
Pollen being removed from microcentrifuge tube for plant DNA analysis.
Pollen being removed from microcentrifuge tube for plant DNA analysis.
Pollen being removed from microcentrifuge tube for plant DNA analysis.

Leetown Science Center researcher, Dr. Deborah Iwanowicz is collaborating with Fort Collins Science Center.  Dr. Scott Cornman who has the lead on a project designed to identify diversity of strains of Lake Sinai Virus (LSV) in bees.  Dr. Iwanowicz is developing primers to more efficiently test for LSV and strain differentiation.

Leetown Science Center researcher, Dr. Deborah Iwanowicz is collaborating with Fort Collins Science Center.  Dr. Scott Cornman who has the lead on a project designed to identify diversity of strains of Lake Sinai Virus (LSV) in bees.  Dr. Iwanowicz is developing primers to more efficiently test for LSV and strain differentiation.

Healy
Healy.JPG
Healy.JPG
Healy.JPG

Dr. Brian Healy is a research biologist and post doctoral research fellow at the US Geological Survey

Dr. Brian Healy is a research biologist and post doctoral research fellow at the US Geological Survey

Trumpeter Swans at Knowles Marsh on the Patuxent Research Refuge
Trumpeter Swans
Trumpeter Swans
Trumpeter Swans

Trumpeter Swans at Knowles Marsh at the Eastern Ecological Science Center on the Patuxent Research Refuge in Laurel, MD.

Trumpeter Swans at Knowles Marsh at the Eastern Ecological Science Center on the Patuxent Research Refuge in Laurel, MD.

Laysan Albatross colony on Midway Atoll, Northwest Hawaiian Islands
Laysan Albatross Colony on Midway Atoll
Laysan Albatross Colony on Midway Atoll
Laysan Albatross Colony on Midway Atoll

Laysan Albatross nesting colony on Sand Island, Midway Atoll, Northwest Hawaiian Islands.

Laysan Albatross nesting colony on Sand Island, Midway Atoll, Northwest Hawaiian Islands.

Lauren E. Walker holding a banded raven
Lauren E. Walker holding a banded raven
Lauren E. Walker holding a banded raven
Lauren E. Walker holding a banded raven

Employee Spotlight: Lauren Walker

Newest member of the Bird Banding Laboratory has a long history with birds.

Employee Spotlight: Lauren Walker

Newest member of the Bird Banding Laboratory has a long history with birds.

Rising mist and fall colors around a pond.
Mist over Patuxent Research Refuge's Snowden pond
Mist over Patuxent Research Refuge's Snowden pond
Mist over Patuxent Research Refuge's Snowden pond

Rising mist and fall colors at Snowden Pond, Patuxent Research Refuge, Laurel, MD. Patuxent Research Refuge is the only National Wildlife Refuge established explicitly for research purposes, and is home to both USFWS and USGS programs, including the Bird Banding Lab.

Rising mist and fall colors at Snowden Pond, Patuxent Research Refuge, Laurel, MD. Patuxent Research Refuge is the only National Wildlife Refuge established explicitly for research purposes, and is home to both USFWS and USGS programs, including the Bird Banding Lab.

A ruby-crowned kinglet captured in a mist net.
Bird in mist net at Patuxent Research Refuge
Bird in mist net at Patuxent Research Refuge
Bird in mist net at Patuxent Research Refuge

Gotcha! A ruby-crowned kinglet waits to be extracted from a mist net at the Bird Banding Lab's fall migration banding station. Powerlines that run through the Patuxent Wildlife Research Refuge, near Laurel, MD are managed as shrub habitat instead of mowed, which provides stopover habitat for migratory birds.

Gotcha! A ruby-crowned kinglet waits to be extracted from a mist net at the Bird Banding Lab's fall migration banding station. Powerlines that run through the Patuxent Wildlife Research Refuge, near Laurel, MD are managed as shrub habitat instead of mowed, which provides stopover habitat for migratory birds.

Picture of two large white birds called whooping cranes. This picture was part of an article in the Washington Post.
Whooping Cranes from Wash. Post
Whooping Cranes from Wash. Post
Whooping Cranes from Wash. Post

Recently a long-time resident of Patuxent Wildlife Research Center (now part of the Eastern Ecological Science Center) made the Washington Post. A color photograph of "Zinc" and "Mrs. Zinc" was featured in a story about naming animals. Zinc received his unique name when he was less than one-year-old.

Recently a long-time resident of Patuxent Wildlife Research Center (now part of the Eastern Ecological Science Center) made the Washington Post. A color photograph of "Zinc" and "Mrs. Zinc" was featured in a story about naming animals. Zinc received his unique name when he was less than one-year-old.

A yellow and gray bird is perched on a branch with green leaves and orange berries in the background
Fall Cape May Warbler
Fall Cape May Warbler
Fall Cape May Warbler

A Cape May Warbler pauses during fall migration on its journey south in Owings, MD

A Cape May Warbler pauses during fall migration on its journey south in Owings, MD

Two biologists stand in shallow water holding least tern chicks to re-read their leg bands.
USGS and USFWS biologists survey terns at Poplar Island, MD
USGS and USFWS biologists survey terns at Poplar Island, MD
USGS and USFWS biologists survey terns at Poplar Island, MD

At Poplar Island in the Chesapeake Bay, MD, Peter McGowan (USFWS, left) and Diann Prosser (USGS, right) capture fledgling common terns to read plastic colored leg bands that identify individual birds. Here interagency collaboration leads to benefits for wildlife and people.

At Poplar Island in the Chesapeake Bay, MD, Peter McGowan (USFWS, left) and Diann Prosser (USGS, right) capture fledgling common terns to read plastic colored leg bands that identify individual birds. Here interagency collaboration leads to benefits for wildlife and people.

Northeast Region Photo Contest Winner | October 2018 | People  Salamander sampling crew
Cave Salamander sampling crew
Cave Salamander sampling crew
Cave Salamander sampling crew

Northeast Region Photo Contest Winner | October 2018 | People 

Salamander sampling crew

Northeast Region Photo Contest Winner | October 2018 | People 

Salamander sampling crew