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News: Cedar Key Commission Meeting Highlights
April 7th, 2005

News: Concensus Report from the 2004 Charrette
March 31st, 2005

News: Fire Protection Discussed
March 26th, 2005

News: Hotly Contested Elections in May
March 26th, 2005

News: City Tranfers Dock Leases
March 17th, 2005

News: Housing Rumors Dispelled
March 6th, 2005

News: Trojan Horse Visits Cedar Key
March 6th, 2005

News: Health Needs Survey Reported
March 4th, 2005

News: Proposal to Buy Docks
February 24th, 2005

News: Plane Crashes in Cedar Key Fog (updated photos)
February 22nd, 2005

News: Accord Insurance Open for Business
February 16th, 2005

News: Purchase of the Big Dock?
February 16th, 2005

News: Cedar Key Commission Grapples with Fire Protection
February 6th, 2005

News: Green Replat Request Denied
January 19th, 2005

News: Gulf Trail Sunk
January 5th, 2005

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The New Manager at the Suwannee National Wildlife Refuge

The New Manager at the Suwannee National Wildlife Refuge

Jim Hoy

The new manager of the Lower Suwannee National Wildlife Refuge officially took charge on November 2006. He is John Kasbohm, a man with a wide range of experience with wildlife and facing several management challenges. Graduate study ranging from bugs to bears eventually brought him to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Kasbohm's last assignment was as Assistant Manger of the Chassahowitzka Wildlife Refuge near Crystal River where the Whooping Cranes over winter.


Dr. John Kasbohm, Manager of the Lower Suwannee National Wildlife Refuge.

The primary concerns at the Lower Suwannee refuge are restoring long-leaf pine and protecting the seabird nesting on islands near Cedar Key. The managerial challenges include filling several vacant positions on the refuge staff and facing a flat budget while costs increase.

Kasbohm, more properly Dr. Kasbohm, earned a doctor degree at Virginia Tech where he studied black bear ecology. His experience with bears led to additional research on the endangered Florida Panther. At the Chassahowitzka refuge he gained experience with another endangered species, the Whooping Crane. His enthusiasm for the very successful crane project was apparent when he mentioned the recent arrival of the first offspring of cranes reared in the crane recovery program.

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