980 resultados para Artisanal fishing
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A report by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources on the trends of Iowa wildlife populations and harvest.
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A report by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources on the trends of Iowa wildlife populations and harvest.
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A report by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources on the trends of Iowa wildlife populations and harvest.
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A report by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources on the trends of Iowa wildlife populations and harvest.
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A report by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources on the trends of Iowa wildlife populations and harvest.
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A report by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources on the trends of Iowa wildlife populations and harvest.
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A report by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources on the trends of Iowa wildlife populations and harvest.
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A report by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources on the trends of Iowa wildlife populations and harvest.
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A report by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources on the trends of Iowa wildlife populations and harvest.
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A report by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources on the trends of Iowa wildlife populations and harvest.
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The Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR) solicited responses from bow hunters for the annual Bowhunter Observation Survey
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The Iowa DNR is asking for assistance from landowners and hunters in dealing with what it hopes is an isolated case of Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) found in a wild deer harvested in Allamakee County. The
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This document lists trophy white-tail deer. A deer qualifies as a trophy by the score of the conformation of its antlers and and by type of weapon that was used.
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Williamson Pond is a 26-acre publicly owned lake located about 2 miles east of the town of Williamson, in Lucas County. It has a watershed area of 1,499 acres. It has been managed since 1976 by the Lucas County Conservation Board (while still under state ownership) for fishing, boating, hunting, picnicking and other passive uses. Designated uses are Class AI, primary contact, and Class B (LW) aquatic life. Williamson Pond is on the 2004 EPA 303(d) List of Impaired Waters. A Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) for turbidity and nutrients at Williamson Pond was prepared by IDNR in 2005 and approved by EPA in 2006. The TMDL set reduction targets for both suspended sediment and phosphorus. The Williamson Pond Watershed Management Plan has provided the local work group and partners with information to develop and implement strategies to improve and protect water quality. These strategies are based on a three phase approach that will ultimately lead the removal of Williamson Pond from the Impaired Waters List. The goals identified in this proposal (Phase I) will reduce sediment and phosphorus delivery by 453 tons and 589 pounds annually. The Lucas County SWCD has and will continue to provide leadership on the Williamson Pond Project and has secured the partnerships necessary to address water quality problems and hired a part-time project coordinator to manage, implement, and oversee all activities pertaining to this proposal.
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Lake Icaria is a 660 acre man-made lake in rural Adams County. Lake Icaria is a popular recreational attraction providing ample fishing, boating, and swimming opportunities. Constructed in 1977 for water supply, Lake lcaria continues to provide reliable drinking water to 1,900 households in Adams and Montgomery counties. No stranger to the water quality world, Lake Icaria was the primary lake in the 3Lakes Water Quality Project(1996-2004), an eight year water quality effort which came to be known as one oflowa's first great water quality successes. At time of construction the Lake Icaria watershed was primarily grass. A shift towards maximizing crop production in the 1980's brought about the end of dairy farms and a concern for sediment loss and how that would affect water quality. This change in land use set the stage for the first water quality project at Lake Icaria. Since the conclusion of the 3Lakes Water Quality Project in 2004land use in the watershed has made yet another monumental shift towards crop production. Nearly 2,000 acres ofland that was once in the conservation reserve program is now being planted to a crop. This change in land use has once again brought about serious concerns for the quality of water being provided by Lake Icaria.