Give Wildlife a Brake - Compassion, awareness and action for wildlife crossing roads
  • Wildlife Corridors
    • Wildlife Crossings in the US >
      • Do Wildlife Bridges Work?
      • Wildlife on Roads
    • Walk4WildlifeCrossings
  • End Roadkill
    • Cost of Wildlife Care
  • Store
    • Wildlife Calendars >
      • Calendar Updates
    • Wildlife Corridor Store Unlimited
  • Everything Else
    • Be a Wildlife Champion
    • Blog >
      • Write Wildlife Content
    • About
    • Press
    • Contact

The Ultimate Wildlife Corridor Blog

Fewer than 100 ocelots still exist in the wild in the United States. In the state of Texas their biggest threat is being killed by a car.

How to avoid hitting a deer while driving

10/26/2019

1 Comment

 
​People are often baffled by deer behavior on the roads, sharing stories of deer not only darting out into the road but jumping right into the side of the car or stopped in the middle of the road, "caught in the headlights."
Here are some tips from Natural Forests on how to avoid hitting a deer while driving:
  • Waterways are natural passages for wildlife. Keep an eye out for deer on sides of bridges.
  • Ask passengers to help you keep an eye out for deer. Agree on quick way to communicate, such as "Deer, right!"
  • Deer-vehicle collisions happen more often on two-lane highways where  the speed limit is 55 mph.
  • Don't honk your horn. It could spook the animal and make it dart in the wrong direction. Just slow down and give it time to move. 
  • Animal crossings can reduce risk of animal-vehicle collisions by 80%! ​
Are you in a deer-heavy state? Find out your odds of hitting one.
 Have any other guidance on how to avoid hitting a deer while driving? Feel free to submit your comments below! And be sure to see what other resources National Forests has put out there. The It's All Yours campaign about appreciation of our national forests and grasslands is truly inspiring.
It's Their Home Let Them Roam Wildlife Corridors Logo
Support the bipartisan Wildlife Corridors Conservation Act 2019
This proposal is for a massive conservation effort to preserve and restore native species that are diminishing due to loss of habitat. It's super easy to show your support thanks to Wildlands Network via this quick contact form to your local representatives. ​

1 Comment

Conservation corridors (and other hippie, commie, leftist stuff that’s really not)

10/25/2019

0 Comments

 
Picture
Ever since I started posting and promoting on Facebook about conservation corridors (also referred to as wildlife corridors, ecocorridors, migration corridors and the like), I started getting the sarcastic commentary. “Har-har, how’s the deer gonna know where to cross, deer don’t read signs, har-har!?”
 
Then there were the ones who took it as an affront, a simple photo from Wikipedia—a brilliant illustration of what a conservation corridor could and should look like—presumably with private lands nudging up against land that is reserved as a “corridor” for animals to continue on their way without interruption and fragmentation of natural habitat. It caused quite a stir and some nasty back and forth between community members. My favorite comment by far, however, was the one about “hippie commie climate change b.s.” so I just had to run with that one.
Picture
Wildlife overpasses are used as a mitigation measure worldwide to reduce the mortality of wildlife on roads, and to a certain extent, to facilitate the genetic exchange of both flora and fauna species in forest fragments. This photo depicts a newly constructed wildlife overpass in highly urbanized Singapore, which connects two rainforest nature reserves that was separated by an eight-lane highway for close to 30 years.
Benjamin P. Y-H. Lee (University of Kent). [CC BY 4.0 ]

Hippies, commies, game commissioners, gun slingers

​So yes, there may be some leftist hippie commies in our midst, right alongside some good ol’ gun-totin, NRA members who love to hunt and have a deep and abiding appreciation for wildlife conservation, which means ensuring that animals are healthy, thriving, abundant, and free to move about, feed and reproduce in their most natural state of environment.
 
And for the record, conservation corridors have quite a few fans I would hardly consider of the leftist, hippie commie ilk. We’re talking Departments of Transportation, Departments of Natural Resources, and Game Commissions from Montana to Florida and quite a few in between—who have been studying wildlife-vehicle interaction for decades and understand the value of coming at this very costly issue from “under” and “above” rather than dead on the road.
 
That doesn’t mean we all agree on this stuff. There are challenges. But we’re highly intelligent and cooperative human beings who know how to work things out. We’re Americans, after all, so we do things democratically. Not everybody’s happy with everything all the time, but in general, things get better for the greater good of all. 
Have something to fuss about? Go ahead. Get it off your chest. But by all means, do your due diligence and keep learning about conservation corridors and the difference they can make. The difference might end up being in your own back yard.

Picture
HEY! Have you stopped by The Wildlife Corridor Store yet? Get your End Roadkill T-shirt, car magnets galore and more. 100% of proceeds  go to wildlife rescue and rehab.
End Roadkill T-Shirt

0 Comments

    Kennerly clay

    Spreading the word, for wildlife.

    Archives

    December 2022
    November 2019
    October 2019

    Categories

    All
    Roadkill
    Wildlife Corridors
    Wildlife Habitat
    Wildlife Rehab
    Wildlife Vehicle Collisions

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
  • Wildlife Corridors
    • Wildlife Crossings in the US >
      • Do Wildlife Bridges Work?
      • Wildlife on Roads
    • Walk4WildlifeCrossings
  • End Roadkill
    • Cost of Wildlife Care
  • Store
    • Wildlife Calendars >
      • Calendar Updates
    • Wildlife Corridor Store Unlimited
  • Everything Else
    • Be a Wildlife Champion
    • Blog >
      • Write Wildlife Content
    • About
    • Press
    • Contact