Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Images

See our science through the images below.

Filter Total Items: 3146
A tiny bat with a transmitter is held in the gloved fingers of a scientist
California myotis with transmitter
California myotis with transmitter
California myotis with transmitter

A California myotis with a transmitter, part of a study of bats in Yosemite National Park.

A California myotis with a transmitter, part of a study of bats in Yosemite National Park.

Reducing Uncertainties in Eastern Black Rail Conservation
Reducing Uncertainties in Eastern Black Rail Conservation
Reducing Uncertainties in Eastern Black Rail Conservation
Reducing Uncertainties in Eastern Black Rail Conservation

Reducing uncertainties in Eastern black rail conservation. Qualitative value of information to identify field experiments in a resilience-experimentalist adaptive management framework.

Reducing uncertainties in Eastern black rail conservation. Qualitative value of information to identify field experiments in a resilience-experimentalist adaptive management framework.

Graduate students enter fishery data at Apache Lake in Arizona
Graduate students enter fishery data at Apache Lake in Arizona
Graduate students enter fishery data at Apache Lake in Arizona
Graduate students enter fishery data at Apache Lake in Arizona

Graduate students at the Arizona Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit calibrate gear and test new fish sampling techniques (hydroacoustics, electrofishing boat operation) in Western canyon-bound reservoirs in Arizona.  The research compares Arizona Game and Fish Department (AZGFD) sampling protocols with American Fisheries Society (AFS) standar

Graduate students at the Arizona Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit calibrate gear and test new fish sampling techniques (hydroacoustics, electrofishing boat operation) in Western canyon-bound reservoirs in Arizona.  The research compares Arizona Game and Fish Department (AZGFD) sampling protocols with American Fisheries Society (AFS) standar

Graduate student researching food preferences of northern Idaho ground squirrels
Phoenix Aguilar McFarlane is a sophomore at the University of Idaho
Phoenix Aguilar McFarlane is a sophomore at the University of Idaho
Phoenix Aguilar McFarlane is a sophomore at the University of Idaho

Phoenix Aguilar McFarlane is a sophomore majoring in Environmental Science at the University of Idaho College of Natural Resources at the USGS Idaho Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Program. She came to the Doris Duke Conservation Scholars Program (DDCSP) with a can-do attitude and a passion for volunteering in community service and sustainability projects.

Phoenix Aguilar McFarlane is a sophomore majoring in Environmental Science at the University of Idaho College of Natural Resources at the USGS Idaho Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Program. She came to the Doris Duke Conservation Scholars Program (DDCSP) with a can-do attitude and a passion for volunteering in community service and sustainability projects.

People work in a dry stream bed surrounded by beautiful sandstone cliffs
Restoration at Tsegi Canyon
Restoration at Tsegi Canyon
Restoration at Tsegi Canyon

Restoration project at Tsegi Canyon in support of cultural and ecological resources. It was a community project that brought together agency professionals, elders and native youth. This was a partnership with Navajo Nation and USGS Restoration Assessment and Monitoring Program for the Southwest.

Restoration project at Tsegi Canyon in support of cultural and ecological resources. It was a community project that brought together agency professionals, elders and native youth. This was a partnership with Navajo Nation and USGS Restoration Assessment and Monitoring Program for the Southwest.

A group of people build a brush weir in a red sandy wash.
Tsegi_Logo.jpg
Tsegi_Logo.jpg
Tsegi_Logo.jpg

The Restoration Assessment and Monitoring Program for the Southwest (RAMPS) is working with the Navajo Nation Department of Natural Heritage to build capacity for ecosystem restoration in response to climate change and drought.

The Restoration Assessment and Monitoring Program for the Southwest (RAMPS) is working with the Navajo Nation Department of Natural Heritage to build capacity for ecosystem restoration in response to climate change and drought.

Natural Resource Economist coloring page.
Economist coloring page
Economist coloring page
Economist coloring page

Natural Resource Economist coloring page.

Natural Resource Economist coloring page.

A diver underwater uses a hose to spray hot water on corallimorphs.
Applying hot water to control invasive corallimorphs at Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge
Applying hot water to control invasive corallimorphs at Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge
Applying hot water to control invasive corallimorphs at Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge

USGS scientists and partners applied hot water as a control method for invasive corallimorphs at Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge.

A diver underwater uses a hose to apply paste to corallimorphs in a plot marked by a square of white pipes.
Applying toxic paste to control invasive corallimorphs at Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge
Applying toxic paste to control invasive corallimorphs at Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge
Applying toxic paste to control invasive corallimorphs at Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge

USGS scientists and partners applied a toothpaste-like compound mixed with sodium hydroxide as a control method for invasive corallimorphs at Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge.

Picture showing satellite data for a lake
Satellite reflectance for Milford Lake near Wakefield, Kansas
Satellite reflectance for Milford Lake near Wakefield, Kansas
Satellite reflectance for Milford Lake near Wakefield, Kansas

The image shows sattelite relectance data that can be accessed using

arrows pointing to northern spotted owl territory and the movement of barred owl west and its present day territory
Barred owl movement west
Barred owl movement west
Barred owl movement west

Barred owls spread west during the 1900s and today completely overlap the range of the northern spotted owl.

Barred owls spread west during the 1900s and today completely overlap the range of the northern spotted owl.

map with hexagon grid overlay depicting study areas and points depicting barred owl sightings in 2015
Barred owl sightings at Oregon Coast Range monitoring sites, 2015
Barred owl sightings at Oregon Coast Range monitoring sites, 2015
Barred owl sightings at Oregon Coast Range monitoring sites, 2015

Locations of barred owl sightings recorded during 2015 owl monitoring activities. Barred owls were lethally removed from the areas highlighted in pink. Supporting data is found at https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr20201089.

Locations of barred owl sightings recorded during 2015 owl monitoring activities. Barred owls were lethally removed from the areas highlighted in pink. Supporting data is found at https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr20201089.

map with hexagon grid overlay depicting study areas and points depicting barred owl sightings in 2020
Barred owl sightings at Oregon Coast Range monitoring sites, 2020
Barred owl sightings at Oregon Coast Range monitoring sites, 2020
Barred owl sightings at Oregon Coast Range monitoring sites, 2020

Locations of barred owl sightings recorded during 2020 owl monitoring activities. Barred owls were lethally removed from the areas highlighted in pink. Supporting data is found at https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr20201089.

Locations of barred owl sightings recorded during 2020 owl monitoring activities. Barred owls were lethally removed from the areas highlighted in pink. Supporting data is found at https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr20201089.

Field crew in the Adirondacks of New York using detection dogs to find moose scats for a capture-recapture study to estimate
Field Crew in the Adirondacks of New York Estimate Moose Density
Field Crew in the Adirondacks of New York Estimate Moose Density
Field Crew in the Adirondacks of New York Estimate Moose Density

Field crew in the Adirondacks of New York using detection dogs to find moose scats for a capture-recapture study to estimate moose density. 

Field crew in the Adirondacks of New York using detection dogs to find moose scats for a capture-recapture study to estimate moose density. 

graduate student wearing an orange vest on a research boat
Idaho Graduate Student on a boat studying steelhead
Idaho Graduate Student on a boat studying steelhead
Idaho Graduate Student on a boat studying steelhead

In cooperation with the Idaho Department of Fish and Game (IDFG) the Idaho Unit recently completed a series of research projects to better understand the effects of catch-and-release angling on survival and reproductive success of native trout and steelhead. 

In cooperation with the Idaho Department of Fish and Game (IDFG) the Idaho Unit recently completed a series of research projects to better understand the effects of catch-and-release angling on survival and reproductive success of native trout and steelhead. 

Five dark goose silhouettes fly over a mountainous landscape
Tule white-fronted geese flying over Summer Lake Wildlife Area
Tule white-fronted geese flying over Summer Lake Wildlife Area
Tule white-fronted geese flying over Summer Lake Wildlife Area

Five tule white-fronted geese flying over Summer Lake Wildlife Area, the primary stopover site for this species on its fall migration.

Five tule white-fronted geese flying over Summer Lake Wildlife Area, the primary stopover site for this species on its fall migration.

Six dark goose silhouettes fly over a mountainous landscape
Tule white-fronted geese flying over Summer Lake Wildlife Area, OR
Tule white-fronted geese flying over Summer Lake Wildlife Area, OR
Tule white-fronted geese flying over Summer Lake Wildlife Area, OR

Six tule white-fronted geese flying over Summer Lake Wildlife Area, the primary stopover site for this species on its fall migration.

Six tule white-fronted geese flying over Summer Lake Wildlife Area, the primary stopover site for this species on its fall migration.

About a dozen geese in silhouette flap their wings and turn sideways and upside down in midair
Tule white-fronted geese landing in Summer Lake Wildlife Area
Tule white-fronted geese landing in Summer Lake Wildlife Area
Tule white-fronted geese landing in Summer Lake Wildlife Area

Tule white-fronted geese get ready to land at Summer Lake Wildlife Area in Oregon. The geese turn upside down and sideways to drop altitude quickly to land, a behavior known as "whiffling" or "maple leafing."

Tule white-fronted geese get ready to land at Summer Lake Wildlife Area in Oregon. The geese turn upside down and sideways to drop altitude quickly to land, a behavior known as "whiffling" or "maple leafing."

Five tule geese take off at the edge of a wetland
Tule white-fronted geese take off from Summer Lake Wildlife Area
Tule white-fronted geese take off from Summer Lake Wildlife Area
Tule white-fronted geese take off from Summer Lake Wildlife Area

Five tule white-fronted geese take off from Summer Lake Wildlife Area, the primary stopover site for this species on its fall migration.

Five tule white-fronted geese take off from Summer Lake Wildlife Area, the primary stopover site for this species on its fall migration.

Cactus blossom in the grasslands
Cactus blossom in the borderlands
Cactus blossom in the borderlands
Cactus blossom in the borderlands

Cactus blossom in the southeast Arizona grasslands, looking into Mexico.

Cactus blossom in the southeast Arizona grasslands, looking into Mexico.