West Virginia Listing Animals Too Dangerous to Own

  State officials want to ensure West Virginians aren’t making pets out of animals better suited for Africa than Appalachia.

State regulators are responding to a 2011 Ohio release of wild animals by determining what types of wildlife will be illegal for people to own. A draft list in the works.

Residents who already have soon-to-be-illegal creatures won’t lose them if they follow a new permitting process.

In 2011, an eastern Ohio man released 56 animals from his farm before he committed suicide. They included black bears, mountain lions and Bengal tigers. Fearing for the public’s safety, authorities killed 48 of the animals.

Penalties for illegally owning an animal would range as low as $200. Penalties can reach $5,000 and three years in prison if a released animal hurts someone.

Whip-Poor-Wills On The Decline, West Virginia DNR Asks For Help

UPDATE: The DNR is no long seeking reports of whip-poor-wills, but we'd love to you hear about your sighting! Please post them in the comments section…

UPDATE: The DNR is no long seeking reports of whip-poor-wills, but we’d love to you hear about your sighting! Please post them in the comments section below. 

The West Virginia Division of Natural Resources is looking for whip-poor-wills.

DNR officials are worried that the bird is declining in population and so they are reaching out to the public to get a better sense of Whip-poor-will presence throughout West Virginia.

The bird’s really hard to spot since its grey, black and brown coloring act as a camouflage. But the call is unmistakable.

If you see or hear whip-poor-wills in West Virginia between the dates of May 10 and July 31, 2014, please email DNR Wildlife Resources Section biologist Rich Bailey at richard.s.bailey@wv.gov.

“Include the date and location, being very specific; where you saw or heard the bird; your name and phone number; and whether you saw or heard the bird,” said Curtis Taylor, chief of the DNR Wildlife Resources Section.           

Morgantown Changing the Way Deer Are Discovered

West Virginia’s got a lot of deer within its borders, and they can be a burden. For instance, the state’s vehicle collision rate with deer is one of the…

West Virginia’s got a lot of deer within its borders, and they can be a burden. For instance, the state’s vehicle collision rate with deer is one of the highest in the nation, according to a study by State Farm Insurance. In Morgantown, new technology is being used to monitor these animals.

You see them while driving along the interstate. You’ll catch them in your residential neighborhoods, eating vegetables from your garden.

They’re deer, and the state is trying to find better ways to quantify how many of them are in West Virginia. Sheldon Owen is a wildlife specialist at the West Virginia University extension office in Morgantown.

A lot of people will say that we have too many deer out there. Those individuals who love to see a lot of deer are happy with the numbers. We are experiencing a lot of deer damage in the state, to agriculture, to our gardens, and also to our natural resources,” said Owen.

“Our forests are taking a hit because of the number of deer foraging on the seedlings and things that are trying to grow.”

This week, members of the extension office are canvassing Morgantown using new methods to track how many deer are in the city. This includes using a special infrared technology, said Owen.

Any object gives off heat radiation, or a thermal signature. A thermal imaging device basically captures that information and translates it onto a screen so we can form a picture of what is going on out there. We can see this thermal picture of what is across the landscape,” he explained.

“We can determine the outline of a deer, a dog, raccoon, houses, cars, so we can differentiate between what is a dog, deer, or what is going on in the landscape.”

Owen says the infrared technology is superior to the current system that utilizes spotlights.

“We have used spotlights and have driven specific routes and located deer and counted deer over certain area. In using spotlights, we are relying on an external light source, we are missing deer because we can’t see them through vegetation,” he said.

By using this infrared technology, Owen said they find up to 30 percent more of the deer that are out there.

The extension office works closely with the Division of Natural Resources on projects like this. Owen is hoping more counties will use this infrared technology so deer counts can be more accurate.

We’re doing this to try to see, well to come up with a kind of protocol, that everyone can use, other municipalities and communities can use to get a handle on the number of deer in their area,” said Owen. 

Even with the new system Owen expects there will be challenges. He says the biggest one may be line of sight, in other words, finding deer that may be hidden behind buildings and in geographically tricky locations where it could be tough to find them. But he says infrared gives another advantage.

You’re able to see through heavy fog, smoke, mists and things, so it allows us to detect animals that are otherwise missed with our other technologies, such as using a spotlight,” Owen said.

The locators will be traveling in vehicles to do the work. Once the information is collected, the Extension Office will pass along the numbers to the city of Morgantown, which allows urban deer hunting. Owen and his team also work with the Division of Natural Resources, so they will receive the more accurate numbers as well.

Bald Eagle Hit by Train in New River Gorge

A bald eagle has survived a collision with an Amtrak train in the New River Gorge.
 
Wendy Perrone with the Three Rivers Avian Center tells the Charleston Gazette that the female eagle is the mate of a male eagle that was hit by another Amtrak train in 2013.
 
Perrone says the female eagle was hit last Friday near the pair’s nesting site at the south end of the New River Gorge National River between Sandstone and Hinton.
 
Perrone says the eagle was spotted last Saturday sitting along the tracks. It flew across the river to the pair’s old nesting site when approached.
 
The avian center is monitoring the eagles’ current nest. Perrone says the pair was observed mating but no eggs or young eaglets could be seen.
 
 

Ireland's Wild River on Display

The Shannon is Ireland’s greatest geographical landmark and longest river. It is both a barrier and highway – a silver ribbon holding back the rugged…

The Shannon is Ireland’s greatest geographical landmark and longest river. It is both a barrier and highway – a silver ribbon holding back the rugged landscapes of the west from the gentler plains to the east.

It’s on display on West Virginia PBS during Nature:Ireland’s Wild River on Thursday, March 5 at 8 p.m.

On its journey south, the Shannon passes through a huge palette of rural landscapes, where on little-known backwaters, Ireland’s wild animals and plants still thrive as almost nowhere else.

http://video.wvpublic.org/video/2365149038/

For a year, wildlife cameraman Colin Stafford-Johnson lives on the river — camping on its banks, exploring its countless tributaries in a traditional canoe, following the river from dawn to dusk through the four seasons, on a quest to film the natural history of the Shannon as it has never been seen or heard or experienced before

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