Your Daily Outdoor News Update – November 20th
Your Daily Outdoor News Update – November 20th Read More »
That’s down by about 1,000 from last year.
Youth gun hunters harvest nearly 5,000 deer Read More »
AUSTIN — Texas Parks and Wildlife Department biologists have classified Lake Georgetown as infested with an established, reproducing population of invasive zebra mussels and have also changed the status of Lake Livingston to fully infested. Lake Georgetown is a 1,297-acre impoundment controlled by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, located just north of Austin on
Zebra mussels continue to find their way into Texas waters Read More »
NEW ORLEANS — A dozen young whooping cranes from Wisconsin, Maryland, and Alberta, Canada, are being gradually introduced to the wild in a Louisiana refuge. The Audubon Species Survival Center’s assistant curator, Richard Dunn, says Tuesday was a big day. He brought the rare, endangered birds to the Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge on the southwest Louisiana
Whooping cranes finding a home in Louisiana Read More »
KENAI, Alaska — The Alaska Board of Game has reaffirmed that using an airplane to spot Dall sheep while hunting is illegal. The board recently narrowly shot down a proposal that would have repealed the regulation on using planes to hunt the sheep, the Peninsula Clarion reported. The ban was put in place in 2015 and has
Alaska board reaffirms ban on using planes to hunt sheep Read More »
Lake Winnipeg algae blooms are so large that they’re visible from space.
Harmful algae: Farm runoff and the worsening algae plague Read More »
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Sometime next April, pregnant cows in the Porcupine Caribou Herd in Canada will take the lead in an annual migration of nearly 200,000 animals north to Alaska. From winter grounds in Canada’s Yukon Territory, the caribou traveling in small and large groups will cross rivers and gaps in the mighty Brooks Range
Congress debates oil drilling in largest U.S. wildlife refuge Read More »
Harvest goal is part of deer planning effort.
DNR Wildlife Section proposes statewide deer harvest goal of 190,000 Read More »
This means humans must learn to better coexist with the adaptable predators; it’s especially bad news for deer.
Scientists: Getting more ‘wolf-like’ is key to the future for East Coast coyotes Read More »