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Fresno Field Station Records --

 Collection
Identifier: NWRC 0037

Scope and Contents

The Fresno Field Station Records consists of five boxes of records arranged into three series based on record type. The majority of records in this collection are dated late-1960s through late-1970s.

Series I includes one box of administrative records including reports, correspondence, memorandums, interagency agreements, and information bulletins.

Series II includes three boxes of records related to research conducted by staff at the Fresno Field Station. Much of the research in this collection was carried out at the San Joaquin Experimental Range north of Fresno. Records in Series II include work plans, progress reports, correspondence, bioassay data, and research records pertaining to studies on the potential hazards of field-use rodenticides such as zinc phosphide, strychnine, and compound 1080 to non-target wildlife on rangeland. Also included is research on the economic impact of native rodents on crop and rangeland production in California, including damage to vegetation and irrigation structures. Research on the San Joaquin Kit Fox is included in Series II as well.

Series III contains one box of records from the Nutria Research Station in Houma, LA. Records related to nutria research were collected by Frank Schitoskey Jr, who transferred from the Nutria Research Station in Louisiana to the Fresno, CA, Field Station in 1969.

Dates

  • 1960 - 1980
  • Majority of material found within 1967 - 1979

Creator

Biographical / Historical

The Denver Wildlife Research Center (predecessor to the National Wildlife Research Center) conducted research at the USDA Pacific SW Forest and Range Experiment Station in Fresno, California, from the early-1960s through the late-1970s. However, wildlife research at the station first began when the Bureau of Biological Survey began conducting wildlife research at the station in 1936.

The DWRC was part of the US Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife, Division of Wildlife Research under the Department of Interior at the time it maintained a presence at the Fresno station. DWRC researchers at the Fresno station worked in close cooperation with other Federal and State agencies. Funding, office space, technical assistance, supplies and equipment were supplied by the US Forest Service and the California Department of Food and Agriculture. DWRC researchers also conducted wildlife habitat studies in cooperation with the National Park Service and the University of California.

In 1969, DWRC’s Agricultural Rodent Unit switched their efforts from controlling rodent damage to sugarcane in Texas and Louisiana to evaluating the impact of native rodents on crop and rangeland production in California, including damage to vegetation and irrigation structures. In particular, studies at the Fresno station focused on finding new and safer toxicants for controlling damage caused by California ground squirrels and voles, as well as determining the hazards of these toxicants to non-target wildlife and the endangered San Joaquin kit fox.

The establishment of the EPA in 1970 and the passing of FIFRA (Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act) in 1972 caused a shift in the orientation of DWRC’s Agricultural Rodent Unit research. Screening of new compounds ceased and emphasis shifted to safety studies on compounds considered registerable. Much effort was placed on making zinc phosphide a general purpose rodenticide to replace compound 1080 and strychnine, which were now banned for use on Federal lands under FIFRA.

Much of the Fresno station’s research was conducted on the San Joaquin Experimental Range, a 4500-acre experimental forest 25 miles north of Fresno. In 1971, it was suggested that rodenticides used in rodent control programs might be a factor in the decline of the San Joaquin kit fox, an endangered species found only in the San Joaquin Valley of California. Researchers at the Fresno station conducted studies in 1972-1974 to determine the susceptibility of the kit fox to common rodenticides such as strychnine, compound 1080, and zinc phosphide.

Also in 1972, the annual grassland site of the International Biological Program, Grassland Biome, was established at the San Joaquin Experimental Range. From 1972-1975, DWRC researchers conducted studies supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation to the Grassland Biome Program on the ecology of small mammals including diet studies on the California ground squirrel. During the same time period, researchers carried out contract studies with the US Bureau of Reclamation to determine zinc phosphide residue levels on artichokes, sugarbeets, alfalfa, range vegetation, and soils on the Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge in northern California. At that time zinc phosphide was the only rodenticide registered for use on a food crop. Data collected during these studies were used in registration applications for the EPA.

By 1977, research efforts once again focused on compound 1080 and evaluating an operational program using 1080-treated grain bait to control California ground squirrels. The specific objectives of these studies were to determine the efficacy of 1080 for controlling ground squirrels, the primary hazards to other rodents, rabbits, and seed-eating birds, and any secondary hazards to raptors and mammalian predators. Additionally, a cooperative study with the EPA in 1976-1977 evaluated the primary and secondary hazards to wildlife associated with aerial application of 1080-treated grain baits. DWRC research at the Fresno station ended in 1979.

Extent

4.6 linear feet

Language of Materials

English

Arrangement

The Fresno Field Station Records are arranged into three series:

Series I: Administrative Records, 1960-1979

Series II: Fresno Research Records, 1963-1980

Series III: Records from the Nutria Research Station in Houma, LA, 1961-1970



Materials in each series are arranged alphabetically.

Legal Status

Copyright restrictions may apply. User is responsible for all copyright compliance.

Repository Details

Part of the National Wildlife Research Center Archives Repository

Contact:
4101 LaPorte Ave
Fort Collins CO 80521 USA
970-266-6021