Fish
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Live Fish Cam
CarbonTV has introduced a live webcam from the Show Pond at the Department of Natural Resources' Wolf Lake State Fish Hatchery Visitor Center.
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Recycling Mono
The program's ultimate goal is to create a network of marked recovery bins at popular fishing locations throughout the state where recreational anglers can dispose of the monofilament as a first step toward recycling the synthetic fishing line into fishing habitats or other products.
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Future of Federal Fisheries Management?
Today at ICAST, the world's largest sportfishing trade show, recreational fishing and conservation group leaders revealed the preliminary findings from a series of collaborative workshops on alternative approaches to federal fisheries management.
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Removing a Swallowed Hook to Save the Fish with Bobby Barrack
Its all about the catch and release!!! Sometimes it's not THAT easy!!
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The Outdoor Industry Kicks Plastic: Cleaning Up Our Own House First
In recent years, the growing mounds of discarded plastic and trash have threatened the oceans' well-being, from poisoning marine life to polluting the shorelines. Anglers and the products they buy are on the front lines to help fight this problem head on, as the fate of the oceans and our future enjoyment of those waters hangs in the balance.
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Knot How-To: Albright #SpiderWire
The Albright Knot is a great choice for attaching a mainline to a leader line, especially when using two lines of different diameter. Additionally this knot is a great choice for connecting the leader when you've already tied a loop knot in the main line like a Bimini Twist, Surgeon's Loop or Spider Hitch
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What are Chemicals Doing to Freshwater Fish?
A sunfish caught in Sullivan Lake on Monday. St. Cloud State University Professor Heiko Schoenfuss says sunfish are a sentinel species for chemical exposure, because they reproduce in shallow water near shore where chemical concentrations are higher
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AZGFD investigation: Horseshoe Lake fish died from low oxygen levels
The significant fish die-off last week on the Verde River below Horseshoe Dam was the result of a lack of oxygen, and not because of anything found in the river, according to a water-quality investigation compiled by the Arizona Game and Fish Department.






















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