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7 results for Wildlife in North Carolina Vol. 83 Issue 2, March/April 2019
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Record #:
36160
Author(s):
Abstract:
A combination of written and photo documentation proved the time it took and process involved in a forest’s recovery from a set fire. Through his documentation, the author asserted this action, commonly done in the South every one to five years, can replenish and cleanse its landscape.
Record #:
36161
Author(s):
Abstract:
Parts of the wild turkey not consumed were used in ingenious ways, Native American groups had proven for hundreds of years. The anatomical parts that could be decorative or utilitarian included the wild turkey’s bones, spurs, feathers, and beards.
Record #:
36162
Author(s):
Abstract:
Dogs handlers were traditionally men in middle and late adulthood, noted the author. Since the 1980s, though, he’d observed women increasingly becoming part of the sport’s ranks. Profiles of four women and description of wild bird hunting proved dog handling and its associated activities were indiscriminate regarding sex and gender.
Record #:
36163
Author(s):
Abstract:
In the briny deep of the Outer Banks and waterways such as streams was a diversity of tropic and cool water life. This diversity’s attribution was in part to the Labrador Current and Gulf Stream. Displaying the diversity were the ocean’s sand tiger sharks and nettle jellyfish, the river’s largemouth bass and waterdog.
Record #:
36164
Author(s):
Abstract:
A physically and economically feasible solution for the decrease of forests: bird boxes. Among the species that could make this structure for the birds were bluebirds and Carolina wrens.
Record #:
36165
Author(s):
Abstract:
The recovery of the wild turkey’s population helped to assure the ongoing need for turkey calls, an important tool in a hunter’s kit. Included was directions for making a scratch box turkey call and images of turkey calls that prove them decorative and utilitarian.
Record #:
36166
Author(s):
Abstract:
Shelter often entails providing for the basic needs of life, and shoreline creatures are no exception. Among life calling lakes and ponds at and below the surface home were the duck potato and duckweek, the great blue heron and leopard frog.