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Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe today announced as part of Great Outdoors Month the agency is proposing to expand fishing and hunting opportunities on 21 refuges throughout the National Wildlife Refuge System. National wildlife refuges provide premier outdoor recreational opportunities across the Nation.
Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge. These Piping Plovers were photographed at White Lake, NorthDakota. Des Lacs National Wildlife Refuge, NorthDakota. Some birds breed in flocks, at least in part to avoid predation. Look carefully and you can pick out some Least Auklets as well.
Birders are familiar with the National Wildlife Refuge System, which consists of more than 550 units distributed through all fifty states. National Wildlife Refuges (NWRs), which are managed by the U.S. FWS calls WPAs the “Prairie Jewels of the National Wildlife Refuge System.”. Ding” Darling NWR in Florida.
of Fish and Wildlife Commissioner Jon Gassett has indicated that if enough people write in protest, the proposed hunting season–due to start this December– will be reconsidered. Hunting is on a steady downturn, and nonconsumptive wildlife pursuits are on a tremendous upswing. We can fight them back in Kentucky, too.
I imagine these explorers had the same reaction as the Lewis and Clark expedition as they moved from the tallgrass prairies of NorthDakota and Montana into the northern Rockies of western Montana. This bird breeds in shrubby desertlands and is most notable for their active behavior.
Baird’s Sparrow, NorthDakota. I viewed this Life Bird on my New Jersey Audubon NorthDakota trip; it was not an easy bird to find, and a challenging one to photograph. John James Audubon first heard the sparrow in July, 1944, on a buffalo hunt in NorthDakota. Another sparrow! An eBird mystery.
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