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Written by Ryan Foutz
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Wednesday, 26 November 2008 |
UFNAWS Second to None in Bighorn Sheep Conservation
Greetings fellow sheep hunters. You will see photos in the following pages of some very happy & successful 2008 Utah sheep hunters. Congratulations to all of you who have had a successful hunt and for those of you who look forward to sheep hunting this fall. This is our first “summer” newsletter and hope it will bring you up to date on what’s happening with Utah sheep and Utah FNAWS. We will continue to still produce the fall/winter magazine that has additional information and many more photos of your success. |
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Written by Don Peay
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Wednesday, 26 November 2008 |
Fellow Utah FNAWS Members,
Recently, I was reading that Idaho’s bighorn populations have declined over the past ten years from 6,500 to around 2,500, and I know that Arizona wild sheep populations are down significantly as well. It is thought that Dall populations are down in Alaska, but the game and fish up there doesn’t even know because there is little survey or sheep work done. Most other states, sheep populations have remained about the same over this period of time. |
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Written by Editor
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Tuesday, 04 November 2008 |
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New Date - New Location 19th Annual Utah FNAWS Banquet Fundraiser |
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Written by Editor
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Tuesday, 04 November 2008 |
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Last Year’s Dontations Being Put to Good Use. . . Utah Will Get 60 Bighorns in Transplant from Montana As many as 60 Rocky Mountain Bighorn will be transplanted to a new home southwest of Duchesne in Lake Canyon, Utah this winter. The sheep will be coming from an area near Great Falls, Montana and be placed in ideal Utah habitat where there currently are no bighorn sheep. Utah FNAWS extends a special thanks to the Montana Department of Game & Fish and Montana FNAWS. |
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Written by Editor
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Friday, 11 April 2008 |
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service News Release The gray wolf population in the Northern Rocky Mountains is thriving and no longer requires the protection of the Endangered Species Act, Deputy Secretary of the Interior Lynn Scarlett announced today. As a result, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will remove the species from the federal list of threatened and endangered species. |
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