By guest blogger Talia Rose, County Line Wild Facebook page October 3, 2016 I live along the South Fork of the Eel River in Northern California and spend a few hours at the river each morning before work photographing the Otters and other Wildlife that...
By Megan Isadore, Executive Director, River Ecology Project July 25, 2016 Badgers are notoriously hard to spot. They’re crepuscular fading to nocturnal, shy, and they move around a lot. They can look like walking ottomans; shaggy, slow and approximately...
By Megan Isadore, Executive Director, River Otter Ecology Project December 1, 2015 Teasing out social structure and behavior is an important part of our work. The way otters use their habitats, bring their young and interact with their prey species provide clues to...
By Megan Isadore, Executive Director, River Otter Ecology Project October 5, 2015 I’m not posting a photo today, because I want to talk about something that can be easy to forget. This morning, my husband and I got up before 7AM and went right out. Yes,...
By guest blogger Robyn Aston, volunteer with the River Otter Ecology Project and member of the Otter Specialist Group of the IUCN May 27, 2015 Currently, there are thirteen species of otters worldwide. All of them are monitored (along with most of the plant and...