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Jul. 28—RALEIGH — On July 1, the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission launched a new, custom licensing system and mobile app, Go Outdoors North Carolina, developed in partnership with ...
Big Game Restoration Program, cooperative quail raising project with sportsmen begin. Two wildlife biologists pioneer process of live-trapping wild turkeys for restocking. 181,153 hunting licenses sold. 1948: Amendment to Kentucky Statutes legalizes hunting raccoons with dogs. Statewide development of Big Game Refuges begins, continues to 1951.
North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission; North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality. Division of Marine Fisheries, is responsible for managing and protecting North Carolina's Marine and Estuarine fisheries. [12] The North Carolina Marine Patrol under the Division of Marine Fisheries ensures protection of this resource. [13]
The agency operates three Wildlife Education Centers, one each in the mountain, Piedmont, and coastal plain regions of the state. From its headquarters in Raleigh, the Commission issues a wide variety of publications, including guides for outdoor enthusiasts, maps, conservation plans, and a monthly magazine entitled Wildlife in North Carolina. [5]
The North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission has passed a new rule expanding the bear hunting season by nine days for the 2024-2025 hunting season, which will overlap with deer hunting season ...
Hunting Heritage Super Fund projects include establishing walk-in hunting areas, planting wildlife openings, developing water resources, conducting prescribed burns, co-hosting outdoor learning events for women, children and individuals with disabilities through the NWTF's 2,350 chapters across the country and supporting the reintroduction of ...
Boating registration fees will increase by 22%, and the majority of hunting and fishing licenses will go up by 28%. The 13-member commission also agreed to a 12% increase in Sportsman and Lifetime ...
In 1947, Happy Hunting Ground absorbed a magazine published by The League of Kentucky Sportsmen (Kentucky's oldest conservation group). An agreement signed by League President Al Blum and Kentucky Division of Game and Fish Commissioner W. G. Buchanan on June 16, 1947, determined the Division of Game and Fish would publish and mail the magazine.