Outdoor News Bulletin

Outdoor News Bulletin

April 2006 Edition | Volume 60, Issue 4 | Published since 1946

Three receive high honors

During the 71st North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference, last month in Columbus, Ohio, a wildlife working group, a fish and wildlife agency director and a wildlife conservation board were accorded the highest honors of the Wildlife Management Institute (WMI). The California Wildlife Conservation Board received WMI's 2006 Presidents Award. Duane Shroufe was given the 2006 Distinguished Service Award. And the Mule Deer Working Group of the Western Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies received WMI's 2006 Touchstone Award.

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"Split estate" at issue across the West

The growing controversy over development of federally owned energy resources on private lands has resulted in the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) initiating a review and at least one state legislature debating legislation on the matter, reports the Wildlife Management Institute.

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Worth reading

It was a close call, but Being Caribou made the worth-reading list. It is the story of a Canadian wildlife biologist/author Karsten Heuer, and his filmaker bride, Leanne Allison, who chose to spend five months traipsing 1,000 miles to find, follow and keep up with the Porcupine caribou herd during its migration from inland wintering grounds in Canada's Northwest Territories to summer calving grounds in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) in northeastern Alaska, and part way back. Their undertaking was an ambitious camping trip and a rather odd honeymoon.

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IP sale of almost 5.7 million acres is sign of the times

In a move foreshadowed by global market changes in the forest products industry, International Paper Company (IP) recently announced sales of 5.675 million acres of timberland, reports the Wildlife Management Institute. The divestiture is part of a three-part strategy announced by IP in 2005, to improve returns, strengthen the balance sheet and return cash to shareowners. The strategy proposed to improve shareowner returns by improving and/or realigning IP mills and evaluating sale of IP forestlands in the United States.

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Initiative becomes fish-or-cut-bait action plan

The National Fish Habitat Initiative is now the National Fish Habitat Action Plan. This unprecedented multi-partner Plan to protect, restore and enhance fisheries and aquatic habitat, got a green light from state fish and wildlife directors and others last month during the 71st North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference, in Columbus, Ohio.

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