Commentary: For conservationists, what was most important issues on a long list?
Here are the conservation issues that convinced the most sportsmen and sportswomen to speak up.
Here are the conservation issues that convinced the most sportsmen and sportswomen to speak up.
I received calls from a couple of readers wondering if we need to be concerned about an increase in nighttime coyote hunting by crews using AR-platform rifles fitted with night-vision optics. The other possible issue
“Most of America’s 600 million acres of public land are in the West, yet proportionally few hunters are residents of those states,” said Kip Adams, NDA chief conservation officer and one of the report’s authors.
Reader-submitted letters to the editor from Wisconsin Outdoor News.
A carbon credit is a tradeable certificate confirming that one metric ton of carbon dioxide, or an equivalent greenhouse gas, is averted from entering the environment in a given year.
Someone in the DNR – maybe more than one someone, we don’t know yet – has turned the spring fish and game hearings upside down this year by deciding the DNR is not going to
Legislation has made it possible to do more for habitat and climate resilience in rural America.
One wonders about the legitimacy of our legislature when a lone senator or representative can conceal their identity while blocking what’s potentially the largest conservation deal in Wisconsin’s history.
Landowners receiving the free permit may name or add other persons on their permit who may shoot deer on that parcel.
For a limited time, you can get full access to breaking news, all original Outdoor News stories and updates from the entire Great Lakes Region and beyond, the most up-to-date fishing & hunting reports, lake maps, photo & video galleries, the latest gear, wild game cooking tips and recipes, fishing & hunting tips from pros and experts, bonus web content and much, much more, all on your smartphone, tablet or desktop For just a buck per month!
Some restrictions apply. Not valid with other promotions. $1 per month for 6 months (you will be billed $6) and then your subscription will renew at standard subscription rates. For more information see Terms and Conditions. This offer only applies to OutdoorNews.com and not for any Outdoor News print subscriptions. Offer valid thru 3/31/23.
Already a subscriber to OutdoorNews.com? Click here to login.