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Renewed Partnership Will Benefit South Dakota Wildlife

Friday, March 5th, 2010 at 3:15 pm

Renewed Partnership Will Benefit South Dakota Wildlife

(Pictured L to R): Dean Schueler, outgoing president of the National Wild Turkey Federation's South Dakota State Chapter; James Earl Kennamer, Ph.D., NWTF chief conservation officer; and Jeff Vonk, secretary of South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks, signed a cooperative agreement to benefit wildlife and conservation in South Dakota. Photo: Michael G. Brown Photography

(Pictured L to R): Dean Schueler, outgoing president of the National Wild Turkey Federation's South Dakota State Chapter; James Earl Kennamer, Ph.D., NWTF chief conservation officer; and Jeff Vonk, secretary of South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks, signed a cooperative agreement to benefit wildlife and conservation in South Dakota. Photo: Michael G. Brown Photography

National Wild Turkey Federation

National Wild Turkey Federation

EDGEFIELD, S.C. – -(AmmoLand.com)- South Dakota’s wildlife and sportsmen will benefit from a new cooperative agreement between the National Wild Turkey Federation (NWTF) and the South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks (SDGFP).

The three-year agreement helps support the NWTF’s on-the-ground work to promote partnerships and complete projects that will benefit wild turkeys, other wildlife and important habitats in South Dakota.

James Earl Kennamer, Ph.D., NWTF’s chief conservation officer, signed the agreement during South Dakota’s NWTF state convention along with Jeff Vonk, secretary of SDGFP, and Dean Schueler, outgoing president of the NWTF’s South Dakota State Chapter.

“This agreement is an extension of an already beneficial relationship with South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks,” Kennamer said. “With a regional biologist who knows the needs of South Dakota’s wildlife and sportsmen, we can plan mutually beneficial projects that will benefit wild turkeys and all manners of other wildlife including pheasants and sensitive species such as bald eagles.”

Cooperative projects may include, but are not limited to, restoring riparian areas — or areas near rivers and streams — in South Dakota through the NWTF’s Northern Plains Riparian Restoration Initiative , planting mast-producing shrubs, helping provide standing grain, assisting ranchers who winter large numbers of turkeys on their property through the NWTF’s Operation Big Sky program, and promoting access to private land for increased hunting opportunities.

The NWTF is a nonprofit conservation organization that works daily to further its mission of conserving the wild turkey and preserving our hunting heritage. Through dynamic partnerships with state, federal and provincial wildlife agencies, the NWTF and its more members have helped restore wild turkey populations across the country, spending more than $306 million to conserve 14 million acres of habitat for all types of wildlife.

For more information about the NWTF, call (800) THE-NWTF or visit www.nwtf.org.

About the NWTF:
The National Wild Turkey Federation is a nonprofit conservation organization that works daily to further its mission of conserving the wild turkey and preserving our hunting heritage.

Through dynamic partnerships with state, federal and provincial wildlife agencies, the NWTF and its more than 350,000 members have helped restore wild turkey populations across the country, spending more than $306 million to conserve 14 million acres of habitat for all types of wildlife.

The Federation works to increase interest in the outdoors by bringing new hunters and conservationists into the fold through outdoor education events and its outreach programs – Women in the Outdoors, Wheelin’ Sportsmen, JAKES and Xtreme JAKES.

The NWTF was founded in 1973 and is headquartered in Edgefield, S.C. According to many state and federal agencies, the comeback of the wild turkey is arguably the greatest conservation success story in North America’s wildlife history.

Visit www.nwtf.org or call (800) THE-NWTF for details.

South Dakota Turn in Poachers Web Site Gets an Upgrade

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009 at 2:01 pm

South Dakota Turn in Poachers Web Site Gets an Upgrade

South Dakota Turn in Poachers Web Site

South Dakota Turn in Poachers Web Site

South Dakota Fish, Game & Parks

South Dakota Fish, Game & Parks

PIERRE, S.D. – South Dakota’s Turn in Poachers (TIPs) Internet Web page is getting a facelift, including the addition of links to unsolved cases.

TIPs is a cooperative effort between the Game, Fish and Parks Department and the non-profit Wildlife Protection, Inc.

The Web page has been around for several years and provides a historical perspective of the TIPs program in addition to keeping the public informed on the statistical data. It will now feature information on high-profile cases being investigated by wildlife law enforcement.

According to TIPs Coordinator, Charlie Wharton, this addition was prompted by two recent South Dakota poaching cases. “The killing of a moose in the Black Hills in early fall and the more recent case involving a bighorn sheep in Custer State Park provided the impetus to reach out to Web users for information. In the past, TIPs has sought out general information on wildlife violations; but, with this addition, we are taking our cases directly to the public.”

The first case being featured on the Web site involves the illegal killing of a mature bighorn sheep in Custer State Park, near Game Lodge Campground and Creek Side Resort on Friday, Nov. 27. The animal’s head and cape were taken, while the carcass was left to rot.

The importance of this case is multiplied because this mature ram was one of only nine that live in the park.

Wharton encourages individuals to check back on a regular basis to view cases under investigation. “Our wildlife belongs to all South Dakotans. By providing information that brings poachers to justice, the public can help solve crimes and protect this resource for future generations.”