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The Western moose [2] (Alces alces andersoni) is a subspecies of moose that inhabits boreal forests and mixed deciduous forests in the Canadian Arctic, western Canadian provinces and a few western sections of the northern United States. It is the second largest North American subspecies of moose, second to the Alaskan moose.
Regarding the moose harvest, this inventory reports a 274% increase in pressure from hunting groups in the period 2002 and 2009. The composition of the population is also an important factor in the sustainable management of the reserve. In 2009, the moose harvest included 129 males adults, 96 females adults and eight [13] calves. According to ...
Jim Shockey (born 1957) is a Canadian outdoor writer, a professional big game outfitter and television producer and host for many hunting shows. Shockey is the former producer and host of Jim Shockey's Hunting Adventures and Jim Shockey's Uncharted on Outdoor Channel and Jim Shockey's The Professionals on Outdoor Channel and Sportsman Channel.
ABC News shared a video on Tuesday, April 30th of a very rare animal spotted in Alberta, Canada. A driver noticed an all-white moose crossing the highway and stopped to take a video of it, and it ...
The Canadian Society of Magazine Editors [9] has awarded Outdoor Canada its Magazine of the Year distinction three times (in 2005, 2011, and 2012), while also honoring EIC Patrick Walsh as Editor of the Year three times. The magazine has also earned CSME's Jim Cormier Award for Display Writing three times and Best Front-of-the-Book honors once.
Elk Island National Park maintains a thriving elk population, estimated at 605 in 2007, as well as around 300 moose and over 500 deer. Parks Canada transferred eighteen moose from Elk Island to Nova Scotia's Cape Breton Highlands National Park between 1947 and 1948. Reintroduction of traditional species has been an important focus as well.
The juvenile moose broke into Sylvia Fedoruk School, in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, and was safely tranquilized and returned to the wild, police said. Moose on the loose crashes through window into ...
The flatter land areas surrounding the forest have almost entirely been converted to cereal-grain farmland, making the forest (and the contiguous Saskatchewan Duck Mountain Provincial Park) an environmental refuge for such large animals as elk, moose, black bear, lynx, bobcat, and timber wolf.