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Entries in Conservation (940)

Friday
Sep182015

Steelhead Film Shoot

The goal was simple: Travel to nearly untouched, far-northern waters to make a conservation film centered around steelhead.

LINK (via:Dylan Tomine)

Thursday
Sep172015

Restoration Spotlight: The Little Juniata

A Pennsylvania river that once was an "open sewer" is being restored with the help of fishermen, paddlers and others who belong to the Little Juniata River Association, led by Bill Anderson of Altoona, Pa. The nonprofit has helped establish roughly five miles of public fishing easements along the river, which now offers Class A wild brown trout habitat.

Wednesday
Sep162015

Project Bay Bones investigates bonefish decline

Bonefish catches are on the decline, and researchers in the Southeast Environmental Research Center at Florida International University are trying to get to the bottom of this concerning trend.

To better understand the decline, the research team is analyzing ecological data from the past 35 years on water quality, climate, seagrass cover, and abundance and distribution of prey, as well as angler catches and effort. The three-year project is funded by Bonefish & Tarpon Trust.

LINK (via: Phys.org)

Monday
Sep142015

TAKE ACTION: Two minutes can help protect 14,000 miles of Oregon streams. 

Photo: Shane Anderson

An important call to action from TU.

The Oregon Board of Forestry (BOF) will soon decide whether to increase Oregon’s riparian buffers. These buffers supply cool water in the heat of summer, water necessary for steelhead, trout, salmon and other organisms important to Oregon rivers and streams.

Currently, Oregon requires only a 20 foot buffer -- far smaller than neighboring states, and according to the science, woefully inadequate as a means of providing the necessary cool water on which these species depend.

LINK

Friday
Sep112015

The fish that's a real 'bastard'

Photo: Fish's Fly and Sportfishing

It's a variety of sweetlips but nothing sweet seems comes from the mouths of anglers trying to land this fish from tropical north Australia.

Recently identified as a new species, the elusive blue bastard gets its name due to it being so hard to catch.

LINK (via:The Sydney Morning Herald)

Wednesday
Sep092015

Bahamas Announces New Marine National Parks

Some good news coming out of the Bahamas courtesy of Bonefish Tarpon Trust.

We are pleased to share good news from the Bahamas. The Minister of the Environment, Kenred Dorsett, recently announced the creation of numerous new marine parks in the Bahamas. Among the new designations are parks on Grand Bahama and Abaco that have been the focus of efforts by BTT collaborators Bahamas National Trust, Abaco Fly Fishing Guides Association, Friends of the Environment, and many guides and lodges.

LINK