Wildlife in the Oilfield
2005 Photo Contest Winners
2006 Photo Contest Winners
2007 Photo
Contest Winners
Photo
Contest Entry Form
The premise that man and nature cannot co-exist, that where man
encroaches, wildlife
scatters and dies out, is simply untrue. When the Alaskan pipeline was being
built, environmentalists bemoaned the fate of the caribou saying the animals
would suffer immensely. The exact opposite happened. In Prudhoe Bay, about
50 miles west
of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, the number of caribou
has quintupled since production began in early 1978. The caribou often use
the oil field equipment and the adjoining Alaskan pipeline for a windbreak
and warmth. Much of the year the temperature in this region is a frigid 40
degrees below zero. 
In New Mexico oil fields, many species of wildlife use equipment in a productive
manner. Birds will use elevated surfaces as foundations for nests. Deer, like
caribou, use the equipment for a windbreak and warmth.
There is so much wildlife in the oilfield that in 2004 IPANM created a contest
where oil field workers and others could
win cash prizes for the best photo or
video demonstrating wildlife adapting to manmade changes in their environment.