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0
2018
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CDFW scientists Richard Callas and Scott Hill release a fisher onto Sierra Pacific Industries’ Stirling Management Area.
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1836
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Aaron Facka checks a live trap set in Siskiyou County to capture fisher for release in the northern Sierra Nevada.
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1716
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View into a transport box which is divided in two sections for feeding and sleeping.
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1715
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CDFW’s Shelly Blair holds a tranquilized male fisher in the Department’s mobile wildlife laboratory.
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1603
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A fisher in a handling cone used to safely restrain animals so they can be tranquilized, equipped with a radio transmitter, and tested for disease.
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1551
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US Fish and Wildlife Service Biologist Scott Yaeger and DFG Senior Environmental Scientist Richard Callas prepare to coax a fisher into a handling cone.
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1532
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A male fisher peeks out of a transport box at the release site.
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1512
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1509
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A tranquilized female fisher and implantable radio-transmitter (white cylinder).
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1507
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0
1500
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A den in a Douglas-fir used by a female fisher in April 2010.
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1492
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A male fisher photographed at a camera station near Stirling.
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1484
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1478
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CDFW Veterinarian Deana Clifford surgically implants a light-weight radio transmitter into the abdomen of a female fisher.
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0
1476
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Fishers in transport boxes (one fisher per box) in transit to Sierra Pacific Industries’ Stirling Management Area.
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0
1470
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A female fisher carrying a kit within the Stirling Management Area. Although this female, as well as others released this winter have occupied dens, this is the first photographic documentation that reproduction has occurred.
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0
1464
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A female fisher bringing quite a large gray squirrel back to her den.
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0
1464
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An incense cedar den tree used by a female fisher in April 2010.
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0
1445
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A female fisher moving a kit to a new den.
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0
1429
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0
1347
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0
1334
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CDFW scientists Richard Callas and Scott Hill release a fisher onto Sierra Pacific Industries’ Stirling Management Area.
Aaron Facka checks a live trap set in Siskiyou County to capture fisher for release in the northern Sierra Nevada.
View into a transport box which is divided in two sections for feeding and sleeping.
CDFW’s Shelly Blair holds a tranquilized male fisher in the Department’s mobile wildlife laboratory.
A fisher in a handling cone used to safely restrain animals so they can be tranquilized, equipped with a radio transmitter, and tested for disease.
US Fish and Wildlife Service Biologist Scott Yaeger and DFG Senior Environmental Scientist Richard Callas prepare to coax a fisher into a handling cone.
A male fisher peeks out of a transport box at the release site.
A tranquilized female fisher and implantable radio-transmitter (white cylinder).
A den in a Douglas-fir used by a female fisher in April 2010.
A male fisher photographed at a camera station near Stirling.
CDFW Veterinarian Deana Clifford surgically implants a light-weight radio transmitter into the abdomen of a female fisher.
Fishers in transport boxes (one fisher per box) in transit to Sierra Pacific Industries’ Stirling Management Area.
A female fisher carrying a kit within the Stirling Management Area. Although this female, as well as others released this winter have occupied dens, this is the first photographic documentation that reproduction has occurred.
A female fisher bringing quite a large gray squirrel back to her den.
An incense cedar den tree used by a female fisher in April 2010.
A female fisher moving a kit to a new den.