wildlife rescue. many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface

15
Wildlife Rescue

Upload: abagail-boye

Post on 16-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Wildlife Rescue. Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface

Wildlife Rescue

Page 2: Wildlife Rescue. Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface
Page 3: Wildlife Rescue. Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface
Page 4: Wildlife Rescue. Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface
Page 5: Wildlife Rescue. Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface
Page 6: Wildlife Rescue. Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface

Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface

Page 7: Wildlife Rescue. Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface
Page 8: Wildlife Rescue. Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist Marc Provencher tries to snare an oiled pelican near

Venice, Louisiana

Page 9: Wildlife Rescue. Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface
Page 10: Wildlife Rescue. Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface
Page 11: Wildlife Rescue. Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface
Page 12: Wildlife Rescue. Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface

Keeping our food safe ~ NOAA published fisheries closures

Page 13: Wildlife Rescue. Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface

Fisherman Mike Labat releases his catch of crabs on May 1 because of the oil spill. On May 19, a 46,000-square-mile stretch of the Gulf of Mexico was off-limits to fishing, about 19 percent of the Gulf. By

June, 33% of the Gulf was closed to fishing.

Page 14: Wildlife Rescue. Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface

The impact may be seen for years.

Page 15: Wildlife Rescue. Many birds dive for their food ~ picking up oil as they pass through the surface

More info for teachers

• For answers to frequently asked questions about Marine Mammal Rescue and Intervention Plans in response to the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill go to

• http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/pdfs/oilspill/faq_rescue.pdf