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Indigenous Peoples Burning Network
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The Indigenous Peoples Burning Network (IPBN) is a support network among Native American communities that are revitalizing their traditional fire practices in a contemporary context. Since time immemorial indigenous people have been using refined fire practices to care for landscapes in what is now the U.S.
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Center for Heirs' Property Preservation
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The Center for Heirs’ Property Preservation is a 501(c)(3) non-profit that protects heirs’ property and promotes its sustainable use to provide increased economic benefit to historically under-served families.
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Black Urban Growers (BUGs)
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Black Urban Growers (BUGs) is committed to building networks and community support for growers in both urban and rural settings. Through education and advocacy around food and farm issues, we nurture collective Black leadership to support Black agrarianism and reimagine Black futures. Based in New York City, BUGs reach is national through its annual conference.
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Black Family Land Trust
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The Black Family Land Trust, Inc. (BFLT) incorporated in 2004 and based in North Carolina, is one of the nation’s only conservation land trust dedicated to the preservation and protection of African-American and other historically underserved landowners assets.
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Landscape Partnership Newsletter-WLFW SE FireMap 2.0: WLFW Science to Solutions Posted
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WLFW news brief.
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News & Events
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Conservation Newsletters
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Landscape Partnership Newsletters
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WLFW East Region Conservation Webinar Series: Northern Bobwhite Session #10 “Decision Support Tool: Managing Timber and Quail”
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Session 10 of the “Northern Bobwhite” mini-series was presented by Daniel Crawford with the University of Georgia. This session focuses on a new app that helps in making decisions for pine management and wildlife objectives in Georgia. Topics covered include background of general pine plantation management, motivation to create this tool, experiment design, and a demonstration of this app.
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Webinars and Instructional Videos
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WLFW Northern Bobwhite Webinar Series
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Addressing Sedimentation Threats
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Rivers and streams are the lifeblood of our environment, home to a stunning array of wildlife, from fish and amphibians to the aquatic insects that form the foundation of the food chain. However, these ecosystems are under growing threat from sedimentation and siltation. When excess soil and fine particles wash into waterways, they cloud the water, smother habitats, and disrupt the delicate balance that sustains aquatic life. The consequences ripple throughout the food chain, from the tiniest insects to the largest fish, threatening sensitive species like the Eastern hellbender and endangering fisheries.
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Stories
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Cozying Up for Winter: The Bog Turtle’s Seasonal Slumber
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While we sip hot cocoa, these remarkable reptiles tuck themselves away, waiting for the warmth of spring to awaken their vibrant world again.
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Stories
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Hellbender Proposed for Endangered Species Act Protection: A Call to Action for Aquatic Conservation
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The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) has proposed to protect the Eastern Hellbender (Cryptobranchus alleganiensis) as endangered under the Endangered Species Act. This proposal addresses the dramatic decline in Hellbender populations due to habitat loss, water pollution, and other factors. The proposal builds on years of collaborative conservation work and scientific study, highlighting the need to safeguard this species to maintain the health of freshwater ecosystems. This proposed rule would extend protection to hellbenders across their range, from New York to Georgia.
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First-of-Its-Kind Study Inventories New Mexican Beaver Dams
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As part of Defenders of Wildlife’s beaver conservation initiative, a new survey, which has never been conducted in New Mexico, reveals an uneven distribution of beaver dams — and the sub-sequential ecological benefits — throughout the state. Commissioned by Defenders, the survey is a critical tool for the future of strategic beaver and water conservation New Mexico.
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