FISH AND WILDLIFE
MANAGEMENT
- Describe the meaning and purposes of
fish and wildlife conservation and management.
- List and discuss at least three major
problems that continue to threaten your state's fish and wildlife resources.
- Describe some practical ways in which
everyone can help with the fish and wildlife conservation effort.
- List and describe five major fish and
wildlife management practices used by managers in your state.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Construct, erect, and check
regularly at least two artificial nest boxes (wood duck, bluebird,
squirrel, etc.) and keep written records for one nesting season.
- Construct, erect, and check
regularly bird feeders and keep written records of the kinds of birds
visiting the feeders in the winter.
- Design and implement a back-yard
wildlife habitat improvement project and report the results.
- Design and construct a wildlife
blind near a game trail, water hole, salt lick, bird feeder, or birdbath
and take good photographs or make sketches from the blind of any
combination of 10 wild birds, mammals, reptiles, or amphibians.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Observe and record 25 species of
wildlife. Your list may include mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians,
and fish. Write down when and where each animal was seen.
- List the wildlife species in your
state that are classified as endangered, threatened, exotic, game
species, furbearers, or migratory game birds.
- Start a scrapbook of North American
wildlife. Insert markers to divide the book into separate parts for
mammals, birds, reptiles, and fish. Collect articles on such subjects as
life histories, habitat, behavior, and feeding habits on all of the five
categories and place them in your notebook accordingly. Articles and
pictures may be taken from newspapers, science, nature, and outdoor
magazines; or from other sources including the Internet (with your
parent's permission). Enter at least five articles on mammals, five on
birds, five on reptiles, five on amphibians, and five on fish. Put each
animal on a separate sheet in alphabetical order. Include pictures
whenever possible.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Determine the age of five species
of fish from scale samples or identify various age classes of one
species in a lake and report the results.
- Conduct a creel census on a small
lake to estimate catch per unit effort.
- Examine the stomach contents of
three species of fish and record the findings. It is not necessary to
catch any fish for this option. You may iit a cleaning station set up
for fishermen or find another, similar alternative.
- Make a freshwater aquarium. Include
at least four species of native plants and four species of animal life,
such as whirligig beetles, freshwater shrimp, tadpoles, water snails,
and golden shiners. After 60 days of observation, discuss with your
counselor the life cycles, food chains, and management needs you have
recognized. After completing requirement 7d to your counselor's
satisfaction, with your counselor's assistance, check local laws to
determine what you should do with the specimens you have collected.
- Using resources found at the library
and in periodicals, books, and the Internet (with your parent's permission),
learn about three different kinds of work done by fish and wildlife
managers. Find out the education and training requirements for each
position.