50% Tuition Discount for the Foundations Course
Dr. Mark • January 3, 2024

Attention College Students and Faculty!
January 50% Tuition Discount for
The Foundations of Wildlife Chemical Capture
One of our goals is to help college students realize their professional dreams and goals of working with wildlife. GWR is offering college students and faculty a 50% discount for our online course, The Foundations of Wildlife Chemical Capture.
Our online Foundations course with practical tools and techniques and engaging videos bring participants into the field to build confidence and success with animal handling.
About the Foundations Course
- This Foundations course provides 16 hours of certification that is recognized around the globe and is utilized and accepted by state and federal agencies and The Wildlife Society.
- This is self-paced training with Dr. Mark’s support and access to the content for a full year including monthly Q&As with Dr. Mark.
- Options are available for college credit as independent study.
- For more information visit our Online Training portal or contact Dr. Mark
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"Dear Colleagues, I'm proud to announce that my wife, Elizabeth, has published her first book! In this blog article, Elizabeth describes how the five Chinese elements can help us "know our dog's true nature". This is a fun way to better understand your dog and better know yourself and your colleagues! Both Elizabeth and I, with domestic animals and wildlife, teach others how to better understand the animals, how to better care for them, and what the animals can teach us. Have fun with this!" Dr. Mark

Here is a great question sent to me from a wildlife biologist taking my online course, “The Foundations of Wildlife Chemical Capture”. Dr. Mark Colleen asks: Dr. Mark, I just finished Chapter 2 where you discussed the importance of accurate weight estimates to determine safe and effective immobilizing drug doses. I see you mentioned observing the ear size in relation to the body, but what are your other go-to observations for estimating body weight for bears? Dr. Mark’s reply: Great question. I have three predominant aspects that I consider when estimating body weight for bears: Ears give me a sense of how old the bear is. As bears grow, their head grows but their ears do not. So a big-eared bear is a small younger bear. A bear with little ears (relative to head size) is an older larger bear. We’re often estimating bear weights when they are in a culvert trap so I first notice if it is a large or small culvert trap because traps vary in size. A small culvert trap will make me think it is a larger bear and can skew my estimate. A larger trap will make a bear look smaller. My strongest reference is writing down my weight estimates on the drugging field form every time we do a capture. We also document actual weight as well. That way we are learning from every animal. When I have a partner at the capture, I ask them to also write down their weight estimate. After we weigh the bear, we know that whoever is least accurate buys the next coffee. It is interesting to note that we have always strived for being accurate with animal weight estimates within 10%. That is the professional standard. I realized that we strive to be accurate within 10% because when we work with ketamine/xylazine and Telazol combinations (which I have done for decades), small variations in dose really makes a difference in the downtime and depth of immobilization. Many biologists are now immobilizing bears with BAM and BAM is more forgiving. We can be 25% off in our weight estimates and not notice a difference in the immobilization. One major reason for this with BAM is that we have reversals to wake up an animal when we’re done. With ketamine/xylazine and Telazol combinations the anesthetics are not reversible. With Telazol, we have to wait for them to wake up and we must wait for ketamine to wear off before we administer the reversal for xylazine. So we don’t want to give them any more than we need to, but we want to be confident that we gave enough! In all cases, we still strive to be accurate within 10% for safe and successful wildlife immobilizations. To recap: Look at the ears Look at the culvert size Write down both estimated weight and actual weight on the field form so we learn from each animal. Care to learn more? Register for the online course, “The Foundations of Wildlife Chemical Capture“ .