Calumet Editions

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Workbook for a Career in Wildlife Management and Natural Resource Conservation

This concise history traces how the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources shifted from hunter-focused game management to an ecological, biodiversity-based approach with the creation of the Nongame Wildlife Program in 1977. A national model, the program supports surveying and restoring species from butterflies and bats to bald eagles, peregrine falcons, and trumpeter swans. Written for Minnesotans who donate via the Nongame Wildlife Checkoff—and all who use DNR guidance—it shows how citizen generosity has protected wildlife and habitats.

I plan to begin using it in my college wildlife classroom

—Bill Faber, professor of wildlife, Brainerd Vocational Tech

Description

This useful little book highlights the historical transition by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources from a focus on managing and propagating game species for the benefit of hunters to a broader ecological biodiversity-based focus by creating the Nongame Wildlife Program in 1977. This progressive program became a national model for other states to create their own nongame wildlife programs to benefit, manage, survey, and restore their wildlife ranging from butterflies, frogs, songbirds, snakes, and bats to bald eagles, peregrine falcons, and trumpeter swans.

The audience for this book includes Minnesotans who annually donate to the Nongame Wildlife Checkoff on their state income tax forms and all Americans who have benefitted from DNR nongame publications, written to protect wildlife by landscaping, gardening, building nest boxes, and bird feeding. The book reveals how citizen generosity has benefited many wildlife species and habitats.

Product Details

PublishedAugust 7, 2024
ImprintWisdom Editions
LanguageEnglish
Print length146
ISBN-13978-1962834209
Dimensions5 x 0.37 x 8 inches

This is an excellent handbook that every pre-professional wildlife and natural resource student should want to have in their toolbox if they are serious about the lessons learned by a lifelong wildlife conservationist, Carrol Henderson, and how he entered and then stayed 40+ yrs in the profession. I plan to make it a required reference for all of my college wildlife students!

—Dr. Bill Farber, Central Lakes College Natural Resources Program Head, Brainerd, MN