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April 21, 2025

At the USGS, we are a leader in wildlife health research and disease surveillance, prioritizing the health and safety of American communities, lands and waters, and fish and wildlife populations.

On April 25, 2025, we are celebrating the first-ever USGS Wildlife Health Awareness Day by highlighting the actionable wildlife health science we provide to the Nation.

What is Wildlife Health?

Wildlife population health is primarily based on a balance of three things: wildlife fitness, quality habitat, and low levels of parasites and pathogens that allow wildlife to co-exist with them or recover after periodic disease outbreaks. When there is an imbalance in those three factors, a significant disease outbreak may occur, affecting the health of the population and potentially the species.  

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A triad representing the three components of wildlife health.
Bull elk group moving near snowy hills

 

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Bat necropsy at NWHC
USGS scientists and veterinarians contribute to natural resource management through efforts to detect, control, and prevent wildlife disease. 

The health of ecosystems, including wildlife populations, is interconnected to our health. Our food, our water, our environment, and our economy are reliant on healthy fish and wildlife. USGS science helps ensure healthy wildlife populations thrive, in spite of disease, and helps maintain productive lands and water for future generations. 

Through the Ecosystems Mission Area, the USGS is the lead federal agency for wildlife disease research and surveillance. USGS wildlife health science focuses largely on disease prevention, detection, and management actions that reduce the impact of outbreaks on wild game species, including deer, elk, and waterfowl; fishes, both freshwater and marine; and other wildlife species that are important to the nation.

 

USGS Wildlife Health Science is Across the Nation

USGS’s National Wildlife Health Center (NWHC), established in 1975, is our flagship center for wildlife disease, and includes wildlife veterinary diagnostic and research facilities. Based in Madison, Wisconsin, NWHC is the only federal select agency program-registered federal entity that focuses entirely on wildlife health. 

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Coral Sampling NWHC HFS
The NWHC includes a field station in Honolulu that focuses on marine wildlife diseases. 
Andy Ramey holding two Blue-winged Teals

 

USGS also conducts fish and aquatic animal disease research and cause-of-death investigations at two facilities: USGS Western Fisheries Research Center in Washington and USGS Eastern Ecological Science Center in West Virginia and Maryland. Western Fisheries Research Center includes the Marrowstone Marine Field Station off Puget Sound, which is one of only a few saltwater pathogen-free research facilities in the U.S. that allows for marine disease ecology research.

Wildlife disease ecology research also occurs in other USGS science centers and cooperative research units across America.

 

Eastern Ecological Science Center

Eastern Ecological Science Center

Western Fisheries Research Center

Western Fisheries Research Center

USGS Wildlife Health Databases

The USGS is dedicated to wildlife disease detection, control, and prevention across America and the globe and contributes to public safety and natural resource management by studying diseases that threaten our public health, agriculture, and economy. 

One online tool, WHISPers, the Wildlife Health Information Sharing Partnership - event reporting system, houses basic information on current and historic wildlife mortality and/or illness events reported by partners across the U.S. Search WHISPers to find out what the most recent wildlife disease outbreak was in your county or state. 

The Aquatic Disease and Pathogen Repository, or AquaDePTH, is a publicly accessible database currently being developed that can support the biosurveillance of aquatic animal diseases and pathogens, allowing natural resource managers to monitor fish kills and aquatic pathogen trends over space and time in both freshwater and marine environments. 

WHISPers

WHISPers

AquaDePTH

AquaDePTH

Wildlife Diseases We Study

USGS wildlife health science is critical for disease management in wild game species, including deer, elk, and waterfowl, to support the Department of the Interior's decision-making related to hunting regulations. Similarly, USGS aquatic animal health science contributes to state, tribal, and federal management of sport fish rearing and stocking for recreational fishing as well as those species of conservation concern. USGS wildlife health scientists also collaborate with communities, state and federal agencies, and Tribes to support the health and vitality of marine and coastal species, such as sea otters, manatees, sea turtles, and many fisheries species, including Chinook salmon. 

Chronic Wasting Disease

Chronic Wasting Disease

Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza

Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza

Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease

Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease

Sylvatic Plague

Sylvatic Plague

Sea Star Wasting Disease

Sea Star Wasting Disease

White-Nose Syndrome

White-Nose Syndrome

Resources

Interested in learning more? Be sure to check out USGS podcasts, presentations, and other materials below to dive deeper into USGS wildlife health science.

PODCASTS

PODCASTS

Presentations

Presentations

Education

Education

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