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Wood stork colonies continue to grow
By Buckmasters Online
Once nearly gone from the swamps in the Southeast, the wood stork has been making a comeback as wetlands are preserved and managed. In Georgia, biologists surveying nesting colonies have seen a drop from the record-setting 2,932 nests documented in 2014, but an increase over the previous two years. Wildlife biologist Tim Keyes, wood stork survey le... READ MORE
The hidden life of a new fawn
By Buckmasters Online
Recently, Young Bucks readers were advised to NOT rescue new born wildlife they encounter in the woods. You may think you’re saving a fawn, but you don’t realize there’s an adult nearby, and what you’re actually doing is harmful. Here, wildlife biologist Steve Bryant with Alabama Division of Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries... READ MORE
Hmmmmmm ... Listen for the cicadas
By Buckmasters Online
Photo: Red-eyed, black-bodied periodical cicadas emerge in large broods every 13 to 17 years, depending on the specific brood and location. If you missed the huge emergence of 13-year cicadas in 2011 because they were not present in the area where you live, you may have another opportunity this year. Two other broods of periodical cicadas will emer... READ MORE
Now you can track a golden eagle
By Buckmasters Online
Photo: Watch movements of the golden eagle captured in Kentucky on the Bernheim Forest website. – Photo Courtesy Billy Pope, Alabama Department Conservation and Natural Resources Researchers recently captured a golden eagle in Kentucky’s Bernheim Forest in Bullitt and Nelson Counties and fitted it with a tracking device as part of... READ MORE
Tundra Swans Soaring North
By Utah Division of Wildlife Resources
If you live near an east or west coastline in the United States, the Mississippi River or any of the five Great Lakes, Utah’s Great Salt Lake or nearby marshland adjacent to these large bodies of water, you’ll know spring is near when great flocks of waterfowl begin their return to the Arctic tundra.
Among them is the Tundra Swan, Cygn... READ MORE
Returning a favor
By Nebraska Game and Parks
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, Nebraska reintroduced wild turkeys from other states to its landscape after the big birds had been extirpated decades earlier during the nation’s westward expansion. The reintroduction was so successful that turkeys have again become common border-to-border, and Nebraska is now able to help another state. Th... READ MORE