The following list is not comprehensive, but should give you
a sense of what’s readily available. Inclusion does not indicate an endorsement
nor does omission indicate disapproval by the New York State Department of
Environmental Conservation or Cornell
University. This list was
last updated 6/03.
ORGANIZATIONS
(whose mission includes nuisance wildlife control activities)
Federal agencies:
United States Department of Agriculture, Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service, Wildlife Services Unit (USDA-APHIS-WS)
Richard Chipman, State Director
1930 Route 9, Castleton
NY 12033-9653
phone: (518) 477-4837 • fax:
(518) 477-4899
Email: Richard.B.Chipman@aphis.usda.gov
www.aphis.usda.gov/ws
Formerly known as the “Animal Damage
Control Unit.” Provides advice, particularly about Canada geese
and roosting crows and blackbirds. Their website includes fact sheets on
specific tools, such as low-powered lasers and the electronic guard, among
other topics.
United States
Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS)
Federal Permit Office
United States Department of Interior
Contact: Nadine Fleming, P.O. Box 799
Hadley, MA 01035-0779
(413) 253-8643 • www.fws.gov
International organizations:
International Assoc. of Fish & Wildlife Agencies, Furbearer Resources
Technical Work Group
444 N. Capitol
St. NW, Suite 544
Washington,
D.C. 20001
(202) 624-7890 • www.furbearermgmt.org
Conducts research on best management practices for trapping
furbearers, which includes some nuisance species
National organizations:
The Fund for Animals
Urban Wildlife Office, PO Box 3665, Amity Station
New Haven, CT 06525
(203) 389-4411 • www.fund.org
The Humane Society of the United
States
2100 L Street,
NW, Washington DC
20037
(202) 452-1100 • www.hsus.org
National Animal Control Association (NACA)
P.O. Box 480851,
Kansas City MO,
64148.
(800) 828-6474 • e-mail: naca@interserv.com
www.nacanet.org Publishes NACA News and NACA
Training Guide. Operates the NACA Training
Academy.
National Animal Damage Control Association (NADCA)
Mr. Ron Jones, Treasurer, NADCA, Route 1, Box 37
Shell Lake,
WI 54871
Publishes a monthly newsletter, The
Probe.
National Trappers Association (NTA)
PO Box 3667,
Bloomington IL
61702-3667
(309) 829-242 • fax: (309) 829-7615 www.nationaltrappers.com
Offers liability
insurance to members. Publishes Trapper and Predator Caller and American Trapper.
National Wildlife Control Operators Association (NWCOA)
1832 North
Brazil Avenue, Indianapolis, IN 46219
(317) 895-9060 • www.nwcoa.com
local chapter: region 7 (NY, MA,
NH, CT, RI, VT, ME). Don LaFountain, CWCP, director: (413) 586-0890
The Wildlife Society
Grosvenor Lane, Suite 200, Bethesda, MD
20814-2144
(301) 897-9770 • Fax: (301) 530-2471
Email: TWS@wildlife.org • www.wildlife.org
Sponsors the Wildlife Damage Management
Working Group.
Northeast regional organizations:
Northeast Association of Wildlife Damage Biologists (NEAWDB)
Tim Algeo, President, P.O. Box 108
Worchester
VT 05682
(802) 223-8690
Publishes quarterly Technical
Notes newsletter.
Northeast Wildlife Damage Management Cooperative
Contact: Paul Curtis, pdc1@cornell.edu
, or Gary San Julian, jgs9@psu.edu
A partnership of universities and federal and state agencies
from CT, DE, MD, MA, NH, NJ, NY, PA, RI, VT, VI, and West Virginia. Jointly run
by Cornell University
and Penn State University.
Wildlife Damage Control
Center
Rutgers University, Snyder Research and Extension Farm, Pittstown, NJ (908) 730-9419 • fax: (908) 735-8290
Wildlife Damage Management Program (Cornell)
(see listing under “state
organization”)
State agencies:
NYS Department of Agriculture and Markets
Division of Animal Industry
1 Winners
Circle, Albany, NY
12235 www.agmkt.state.ny.us/AI/AIHome.html
Dr. John Huntley, Director. (800) 554-4501 ext. 73502
NYS Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC):
Division
of Fish, Wildlife, and Marine Resources,
Bureau of Wildlife:
625
Broadway, Albany, NY 12233-4750
(518)
402-8919 • fax: (518) 402-9027. Email: fwwildlf@gw.dec.state.ny.us • www.dec.state.ny.us/website/dfwmr/wildlife/index.html
For a list of regional offices, see Appendix D
Wildlife Damage Management Unit
(518) 402-8924
Bureau
of Pesticides Management:
(518) 402-8760
There are many relevant resources on the DEC website, www.dec.state.ny.us , such as:
• Wildlife
Damage Control: www.dec.state.ny.us/website/dfwmr/wildlife/damage.htm
• List of
NYS wildlife, organized by legal status:
www.dec.state.ny.us/website/dfwmr/wildlife/spplist.pdf
• List of endangered and threatened
NYS wildlife: www.dec.state.ny.us/website/dfwmr/wildlife/endspec/etsclist.html
• List of pesticide products
currently registered in New York
State. Updated weekly: www.dec.state.ny.us/website/dshm/pesticid/webinst.htm
NYS Department of Health (DOH):
Rabies Lab: Wadsworth Center,
PO Box 509,
Albany NY
12201-0509
(518)
869-4527 • www.wadsworth.org/rabies
Zoonoses
Program: ESP, Corning Tower, Rm 621, Albany NY
12237-0627 (518) 474-3186 • www.health.state.ny.us
Bureau of Injury Prevention: Corning Tower,
Empire State
Plaza, Albany, NY 12237 (518) 473-1143
Bureau of Controlled Substances
(for information about securing a Certificate of Need for the use of syringes
and needles): 30 Watervliet Ave., Albany NY 12206 • (518) 457-0160
State organizations:
Cornell Cooperative Extension Wildlife Damage Management Program
Dept. of Natural Resources, Cornell University
Room 108 Fernow Hall, Ithaca NY
14853-3001
(607) 255-2835 Email: pdc1@cornell.edu
www.dnr.cornell.edu/ext/wildlifedamage
Affililated with:
• C.U.
Department of Natural Resources
• Human
Dimensions Research Unit
• NY
Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
• NYS
Integrated Pest Management Program
• National
Wildlife Control Operators Assoc., region 7
New York State Animal Control Assoc. (NYSACA)
c/o Jack Woods, P.O. Box 885, Oswego, NY 13126
(315) 598-3606
New York State
Integrated Pest Management Program (NYS IPM)
NYSAES, Geneva,
NY 14456-0462
(315) 787-2353 or (800) 635-8356
fax: (315) 787-2360 • Email: nysipm@cornell.edu
http://nysipm.cornell.edu/
New York State Trappers Association (NYSTA)
3594 Black
Creek Road, Cold Brook, NY 13324
(315) 826-7823 • Fax: (518) 392-6190 Email: nytrapper@hotmail.com
www.fortunecity.com/marina/indiabasin/552/index.htm
Secretary and treasurer: Peter Bartholonew
New York State Wildlife Management Association
(NYSWMA)
c/o Robert Meakin,
5721 Middle Rd,
R2 Box 176, Munnsville NY
13409 (315) 495-5561
BOOKS/MANUALS/GUIDELINES
Available from
libraries and bookstores:
Field guides are an indispensable tool for NWCOs. Select a
few for whichever species you handle, such as field guides for mammals, birds,
reptiles, amphibians, or animal tracks and signs. There are several excellent,
well-known series such as those published by Peterson, Audubon, Stokes, and
National Geographic. Pick your favorites. Here are a few lesser-known guides
that may also interest you:
- Amphibians and Reptiles
of the Great Lakes Region.
J. H. Harding. 1997. University
of Michigan Press.
- Bird Tracks and Sign: A
Guide to North American Species.
M. Elbroch, E. Marks, and D.C. Boretos. 2001. Stackpole
Books.
- Bull’s Birds of New York State. E. Levine, ed.
Comstock. 622 pp.
- Tracking and the Art of
Seeing: How to Read Animal Tracks and Signs,
2nd
ed. P. Rezendes. 1999. Harper Resource. 336 pp.
Other notable books:
- America’s Neighborhood Bats:
Understanding and Learning to Live in Harmony with Them.
M.D. Tuttle. 1988.
University
of Texas Press.
- Being Kind to Animal
Pests: A No-Nonsense Guide to Humane Animal Control with Cage Traps.
S. Meyer.
- Bird Hazards to Aircraft.
H. Blokpoel. 1976. Books Canada.
- City Critters: How to
live with urban wildlife.
D. Bird. 1986. Eden
Press.
- Common-Sense Pest Control: Least-toxic Solutions for Your Home,
Garden, Pets and Community.
W. Olkowski, S.
Daar, and H. Olkowski.
1991. The Taunton
Press. 715 pp.
- The Humane Control of
Wildlife in Cities & Towns.
G. R. Hodge, ed. 1990. The Humane Society of the United States.
- Resolving Human-Wildlife
Conflicts: The Science of Wildlife Damage Management.
M. Conover. 2002. Lewis Publishers, Inc. 440 pp.
from the NYS DEC (see website):
- Beaver Damage Control
Techniques Manual.
1997. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.
(to order, see listing under “state agency.”)
from Cornell
University:
(Order from Resource Center,
7 Business & Technology
Park, Ithaca, NY 14850. (607) 255-2090. Email: resctr@cornell.edu )
- Beasts Begone! A Practitioner’s Guide to IPM in Buildings.
L. Braband. 2000. New York State
IPM Program.
- Guide to Pest Management Around the
Home. Part 1: Cultural Methods; Part II: Pesticide
Guidelines.
C. Klass and K. Snover.
2000. Cornell Cooperative Extension Misc. Bulletin S74.
- Human-Wildlife Conflict
Management: A Practitioner’s Guide.
D. Decker, T.B. Lauber, W.F. Siemer. 2002. Northeast Wildlife Damage Management
Research and Outreach Cooperative.
- Managing Canada
Geese in Urban Environments: ATechnical Guide.
A. E. Smith, S. R. Craven, and P. D. Curtis. 1999. Jack H. Berryman
Institute Publication 16, and Cornell
University
Cooperative Extension.
- Managing Nuisance
Beavers Along Roadsides: A Guide for Highway
Departments. P. G. Jensen, P. D. Curtis and D. L. Hamelin.
1999. Cornell Cooperative Extension.
- Managing White-tailed
Deer in Suburban Environments: A Technical Guide.
A. J. DeNicola, K. C. VerCauteren,
P. D. Curtis, and S. E. Hygnstrom. 2000. Cornell
Cooperative Extension, the Wildlife Society—Wildlife Damage Management
Working Group, and the Northeast Wildlife Damage Research and Outreach
Cooperative.
- Pest Management Guide for
Control of Wildlife (updated annually). P. D.
Curtis, M.E. Richmond,
S. C. Frantz. Cornell Cooperative Extension. from The Wildlife Society
(see listing under “national organization”):
- A Manual of Wildlife
Conservation. R. D. Teague, ed. 1971. The Wildlife Society. Washington, D.C.
- Research and Management
Techniques for Wildlife and Habitats, 5tth T.
A. Bookhout, ed. 1994. The Wildlife Society. 740 pp.from
other state agencies/organizations:
- Controlling Deer Damage.
F. R. Henderson and C. Lee. 1992. Kansas State
University
Cooperative Extension Service.
- Field Guide to Wildlife
Diseases: General Field Procedures and Diseases of Birds.
M. Friend J. C. Franson,
and E. A. Ciganovich, eds. 1999. U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S.
Geological Survey, Biological Resources Division Information and
Technology Report; 1999-001.
- Field Manual of Wildlife
Diseases in the Southeastern United States.
W. R. Davidson and V. F. Nettles. 1988. Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife
Diseases Study. [Contact Field Manual, Dept. Of Parasitology,
College of Veterinary
Medicine, The University
of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602]
- A Homeowner’s Guide to
Northeastern Bats and Bat Problems.
L. Williams-Whitmer and M. Brittingham.
1995. State College: Penn
State University
Cooperative Extension. 22 pp.
- NPCA Field Guide to
Structural Pests:
To order, contact NPMA at (800) 678-6722.
- NTA Trapping Handbook: A
Guide for Better Trapping.
T. Krause. 1984.
- Pest Control Technician
Safety Manual.
L. Pinto and S. Kraft. 2000. Pinto
& Associates,
Maryland.
- Pocket Guide to the
Humane Control of Wildlife in Cities and Towns.
G. R. Hodge, ed. 1991. Humane Society of United States.
- Prevention and Control
of Wildlife Damage.
S. E. Hygnstrom, R. M. Timm,
G. E. Larson, eds. 1994. Cooperative Extension Division, Institute of Agriculture
and Natural Resources, University
of Nebraska.
Available online at http://wildlifedamage.unl.edu/
, as a two-volume book, and on CD.
- Skunk Ecology and Damage
Management Techniques for Homeowners.
R. Olson and A. M. Lewis. 1999. University
of Wyoming
Cooperative Extension.
- Truman’s Scientific
Guide to Pest Control Operations,
5th ed. G. W. Bennett, J.
M. Owens, and R. M. Corrigan. 1997. Purdue Univesity/Advenstar
Communications.
- Vertebrate Pest Handbook.
Austin M. Frishman. 1999. To order, contact Advanstar Communications, Customer Service, 131 West 1st Street, Duluth,
MN 55802
or call (218) 723-9180.
- Wild Neighbors: The
Humane Approach to Living with Wildlife. J. Hadidian, G. Hodge, and J. Grandy,
eds. 1997. The Humane Society of the United States.
- Wildlife Damage
Inspection Handbook.
S. Vantassel and T. Olander.
1998. Wildlife Damage Control.
- Wildlife Pest Control Around Gardens and Homes.
T. P. Salmon and R. E. Lickliter. 1984. University
of California Division
of Agriculture and Natural Resources Publications. (Contact: 6701 San
Pablo Ave., Oakland, CA 94608-1239. 415-642-2431).
- Wildlife Removal
Handbook: A Guide for the Control and Capture of Wild Urban Animals.
S. Vantassel. 1994. Wildlife Damage Control. (To
order either title, see listing for Wildlife Damage Control under
“magazines, journals, newsletters.”)
FACT SHEETS/BROCHURES
from Cornell
University:
- Wildlife Damage
Management Fact Sheets
Series primary authors, Paul Curtis and Kristi Sullivan):
some are online at www.dnr.cornell.edu/ext/wildlifedamage
, otherwise, check with the Resource
Center:
- Bats
- Moles
- Raccoons
- Snakes
- Striped
skunks
- Tree
squirrels
- Voles
- White-tailed
deer
- Woodchucks
- Woodpeckers
- Evict and Exile Mice
from Your Home
J. Shultz, C. Koplinka-Loehr, K. Sharpe. 2000. New York State IPM Program.
- IPM for Homes
C. Koplinka-Loehr. 2000. New York State
IPM Program.
- Reducing Pesticide
Exposure in the Home and Garden: Alternatives and Proper and Legal Use
Resource Sheet.
1997. Program on Breast Cancer and Environmental Risk Factors in NY State.
- Resistance of Woody
Ornamental Plants to Deer Damage.
M. J. Fargione, P. D. Curtis, and M. E. Richmond. 1991.
Home-Grounds-Garden Fact Sheet 800.00. Cornell Cooperative Extension.
from Pennsylvania
State University:
- Wildlife Damage Control
series
(primary authors L. M. Williams-Whitmer and M.
C. Brittingham):
o Black
Bear
o Chipmunks
o Controlling
Birds Around Farm Buildings
o Controlling
Birds at Aquaculture Facilities
o Controlling
Birds on Fruit Crops
o Cottontail
Rabbits
o Geese,
Ducks, and Swans
o Moles
o Rabies
o Voles
·
Integrated Pest Management for the
Deer Tick. 1994.
o Urban
and suburban coyotes.
o Low-powered
lasers: another nonlethal tool for resolving wildlife
damage.
o Livestock
guarding dogs.
o The
electronic guard: A tool in predation control.
o WS
assistance with waterfowl.
o WS
assistance at airports.
from other agencies and organizations:
- Rabies
Fact Sheet. 2000. New York State Department of Health. Publication 3010.
- Skunk
odor removal. T. Toburen. 2000. Paul W. Davis
Systems, Inc. See: www.pdr-usa.com/misc/11.htm
- Snakes
of New York
(brochure). G. Johnson. 1994. SUNY
College of
Environmental Science and Forestry.
- Urban
wildlife fact sheet series. Fund for Animals. (especially
the guidelines for choosing NWCOs?)
- Wildlife
Damage Management in Fruit Orchards. 1994
TECHNICAL ARTICLES/REPORTS/BIBLIOGRAPHIES
- “2000 Report of the AVMA Panel on
Euthanasia.” B. V. Beaver et al. 2001. Journal of the American Veterinary
Medical Association 218 (5): 669-696.
- Bat
Rabies in New York
State. 1999. New
York State Department of Health.
- Bibliography
of Cooperative Extension Service Literature on Wildlife, Fish, and Forest Resources. R. L. Ruff et.
al. 1993. University
of Wisconsin.
- Controlling
Animals that Cause Damage or Create a Nuisance. L. W. Adams. Urban
Wildlife Resources.
- “Integrated
Rat Management.” L. Simon and W. Quarles. Common Sense Pest Control
Quarterly vol. 12, no. 1, winter 1996.
- EPA
study of secondary poisoning studies with eagles, owls, coyotes, dogs,
etc.: http://www.epa.gov/oppsrrd1/REDs/2100red.pdf
- “Responses
of woodchucks to potential garden crop repellents.” R. K. Swihart and M. R. Conover. 1991. Journal of Wildlife
Management 55: 177-181.
- “Stopping
gophers and moles.” W. Quarles. 2001. Commonsense Pest
Control Quarterly 18 (4).
- “Toward
a professional position on the translocation of problem wildlife.” S.
Craven, T. Barnes, and G. Kania. 1998. Wildlife
Society Bulletin 26(1): 171-177.
- University of Connecticut Occupational Health and
Safety Program for Animal Handlers.
- Wildlife
and Diseases: Biohazards Associated with Exposure to Animals. R. A.
French. 1997. Northeastern Research
Center for Wildlife
Diseases, University of Connecticut Department of Pathobiology.
- Wildlife
fertility control. K.A. Fagerstone, M.A. Coffey,
P.D. Curtis, R.A. Dolbeer, G.J. Killian, L.A. Miller, and
L.M. Wilmot. 2002. Wildlife Society Technical Review 02-2, 29pp.
MAGAZINES/JOURNALS/NEWSLETTERS
American Trapper
National Trappers Association (NTA)
PO Box 3667,
Bloomington IL
61702-3667
(309) 829-242 •
Fax: (309) 829-7615 www.nationaltrappers.com
Fur-Fish-Game
2878 E. Main St.
Columbus, OH 43209
(614) 231-9585 • Fax: (614)
231-5735
ffgservice@ameritech.net
Furtaker
Magazine
Fur Takers of America
PO Box 18248
Louisville, KY 40261
www.furtakersofamerica.com
Journal of Applied Ecology
Blackwell Science Ltd, Osney Mead
Oxford OX2 0EL United Kingdom
Phone: +44 1865 206206 •
Fax: +44 1865 721205 Email: jnl.orders@blacksci.co.uk
www.blackwell-science.com/~cgilibjnlpage.asp?Journal=jappl&File=jappl
Journal
of Mammalogy
Allen Marketing & Management, 810 East 10th Street, P.O.
Box 1897, Lawrence, KS 66044-8897. phone (785) 843-1235 • fax
(785) 843-1274
e-mail asm@allenpress.com www.mammalsociety.org/pubjom/
published by The American Society
of Mammalogists
Journal of Wildlife Management
<www.wildlife.org/publications/index.cfm?tname=journal
published by The Wildlife Society
Pest
Control Technology
4012 Bridge
Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44113
(800) 456-0707 •
www.pctonline.com/magazine
Pest Control magazine
(888) 527-7008 •
www.pestcontrolmag.com/pestcontrol/
The Probe
The University
of Arizona
School of Renewable Natural Resources
Wildlife Damage Management
325 Biosciences East, Tucson,
AZ 85721
(520) 621-7998 • Email: sullivan@ag.arizona.edu
The Trapper and Predator Caller magazine
Circulation Dept. ABAU33;
700 E. State St.,
Iola WI, 54990-0001
(800) 258-0929 • www.krause.com/outdoors
Trapper’s World
PO Box 96, Galloway, OH
43119
(614) 878-6011
Wildlife Control Technology (W.C.T.) magazine
P.O. Box 480,
Cortland IL, 60112 www.wctech.com
Wildlife Damage Control Specialist Newsletter
Wildlife Damage Control (WDC),
PMB 102, 340
Cooley St., Springfield, MA 01128
(413) 796-9916 • Fax: (413) 796-7819.
E-mail: admin@wildlifedamagecontrol.com
www.wildlifedamagecontrol.com
Wildlife Society Bulletin
<www.wildlife.org/publications/index.cfm?tname=journal
Published by The Wildlife Society
WEBSITES
- Animal
Diversity Web, University of Michigan Museum of Zoology: An online
encyclopedia and museum of animal natural history, distribution,
classification, and more. http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/
- Dobbins’
Products: www.trapperman.com
- Includes
many videos, publications, trapping tips, and a way to find trapping
mentors
LISTSERVS
- NWCOA,
members only listserv. For information, see their website at www.nwcoa.com
- WILDLIFE
HEALTH listserv
Run by the National Wildlife Health Center (NWHC), a Science Center
of the Biological Resources Division of the U.S. Geological Survey, this
list focuses on wildlife health issues.
To subscribe, send an e-mail
message to listserver@relay.doit.wisc.edu with the following in the body of the
message:
SUBSCRIBE WildlifeHealth firstname
lastname.
Substitute your own first and last names in the spaces indicated.
For more information about the list, contact Joshua Dein,
Joshua_Dein@nbs.gov
A trapper’s
forum. Go to their website and follow the directions to subscribe. www.sullivansline.com/tline/tlhome.htm
VIDEOS
- Bat-free Belfries: A Guide to Bat-Proofing. L. M. Willias-Whitmer and M. C. Brittingham.
1995. Pennsylvania
State University.
- The Facts About Bats: Exploring
Conflicts and Designing Solutions. (29 min.). 2002. Cornell Cooperative
Extension.
- Suburban Deer Management: Voices, Views, Visions (28
min.). 1993. Cornell Cooperative Extension. 147VSDM.
- Suburban
Goose Management: Searching for Balance (28 min.). 1998. Cornell
Cooperative Extension. 147VSGM. [see complementary manual, Managing Canada
Geese in Urban Environments].
- Summertime Beaver Control. (1 hr. 37 min.). Charles and Paul
Dobbins. Dobbins’ Products.
- Whitetails at the Crossroads. (30 min.). 1996. Cornell
Cooperative Extension. 147VWC.
COURSES/WORKSHOPS/CONFERENCES
- Eastern
Wildlife Damage Control Conference
Offered in the fall of years ending in an odd number, such as 2003, 2005.
- Vertebrate
Pest Conference
Offered in the spring of years ending in an even number (2004,
2006), this conference is hosted by a different university each time. To
receive info, fill out the mailing list form on this website: http://www.vpconference.org
- Northeast
Fish and Wildlife Conference
Rotates around the 13 northeastern states, usually hosted by that
state’s lead wildlife agency.
- WCT/NWCOA
National Conference
An annual conference
- National Goose Control Academy
An annual two-day workshop that includes classroom and field training.
Contact Kirk La Pierre, (201) 933-9700 or (877) 667-6674, kirk@goosecontrol.com or Tim Julien,
(317) 895-9069, tjulien@iquest.com
- New
England Nuisance Wildlife Control Seminar
offered in the spring by the CT NWCOA, in conjunction with their
annual meeting
- NYS
Wildlife Mgmt. Association Spring seminar
held in conjunction with their annual meeting