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Metadata
Title: FWS Employee with Peregrine Falcon
Alternative Title: (none)
Creator: Hollingsworth, John and Karen
Source: WV-7724-Working for wildlife
Publisher: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Contributor: NATIONAL CONSERVATION TRAINING CENTER-PUBLICATIONS AND TRAINING MATERIALS
Language: EN - ENGLISH
Rights: (public domain)
Audience: (general)
Subject: FWS employee, threatened species, bird, raptor, Monomoy NWR, Maine, National Wildlife Refuge
Description
Abstract: FWS personnel with falcon "hacker." The decline of the Peregrine Falcon coincided with the introduction of the pesticide DDT in 1947. Birds of prey at the top of the food chain, such as falcons, ingested relatively high levels of the pesticide, which was concentrated in the fatty tissues of their prey. Falcons contaminated with DDT failed to lay eggs or produced thin eggshells that broke during incubation. In 1972, DDT was banned in the United States, and a slow recovery for the Peregrine Falcon began. http://ecos.fws.gov/webpage/
Date
Available: August 30 2002
Issued: August 30 2002
Modified: May 10 2004 |