Biographical Information
about Joesph Lint
Joseph Lint is a wildlife
biologist with the Oregon State Office of the Bureau of Land
Management. He currently
serves as the northern spotted owl module lead for the Effectiveness
Monitoring Program under the Northwest
Forest Plan. Joe received his B.S. degree in forest management
from West Virginia University and his M.S. degree
in wildlife management from Virginia Tech. From 1974 to 1978, he
was a wildlife biologist with the Coeur d’Alene
District of the BLM in Idaho. In 1978, he transferred to the Roseburg
District of the BLM in Oregon where he was
the district biologist for over 12 years. In 1990, he assumed wildlife
biologist duties in the Oregon State Office
although he retained his duty station in Roseburg. Joe has been
involved with spotted owl conservation and
management for the past 27 years. In addition to inventory and
banding of owls in the early years, Joe has also
been involved in several of the major federal conservation planning
efforts. He was member of the Interagency
Scientific Committee that drafted a conservation stategy for the
northern spotted owl in 1990, and he was also a
member of the Forest Ecosystem Management Assessment Team whose
report was the basis for the Northwest
Forest Plan. Since the adoption of the Forest Plan in 1994, Joe
has been actively involved in the interpretation and
implementation of the Plan working with issues ranging from threatened
and endangered species to red tree voles
to forest thinning.
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