
FWP meeting Feb. 24 on Tobacco Valley elk management
Feb. 21—Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks is hosting a public meeting Monday to discuss elk management and the hunting season structure in Hunting District 101 in the Tobacco Valley in Lincoln County.
The meeting is Feb. 24 from 6-8 p.m. at Timbers Event Center, 101 Julian Drive, in Eureka.
FWP Wildlife Biologist Ethan Lula is hosting the meeting with interested members of the public to help gauge public satisfaction with current hunting season structures in the hunting district, identify potential concerns and develop potential season proposals in accordance with the Montana Statewide Elk Management Plan.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
10 hours ago
- New York Times
Valmik Thapar, Tenacious Tiger Conservationist in India, Is Dead
Valmik Thapar, a tenacious conservationist who wrote eloquently about tigers in India and worked to protect them against the impact of poachers, the loss of habitat and government policies that he abhorred, died on May 31 at his home in New Delhi. He was 72 or 73. His family said in a statement that the cause was cancer. He was born in 1952, though the specific date is unclear. Mr. Thapar was a big man with a loud, hyperarticulate and uncompromising style, which he channeled in service of tigers. He believed that they deserved nothing less than 'inviolate protected areas' in which to live without human encroachment. 'He was not an institutional person, but he was an institution unto himself because of his knowledge, sensitivity and ability to communicate,' Ravi Singh, the chief executive and secretary general of the World Wildlife Fund-India, said in an interview. Ullas Karanth, the former India program director of the Wildlife Conservation Society, which operates four zoos and an aquarium in New York City, said in email that Mr. Thapar had 'used his deep political and media connections to widely publicize the 'tiger crisis.'' The tiger population in India, home to most of the world's wild tigers, fell from about 40,000 in the 1950s to 1,411 in 2006. But conservation efforts have led to its substantial growth, to 3,682 in 2022. In the Ranthambhore Tiger Reserve, in the northwestern state of Rajasthan, where Mr. Thapar first fell in love with the animals, the number rose from about 15 in 2006 to about 70 in 2022, Mr. Singh said. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


CBS News
11 hours ago
- CBS News
Baby deer found in road rescued by Massachusetts police officer, reunited with mother
A police officer in Ludlow, Massachusetts rescued a baby deer and reunited the animal with its mother Sunday night. Officer Austin Blair was working the overnight shift when he came across the fawn lying in the road on Chapin Street, the police department said. Animal control responded and determined that the deer was only a few days old. They also saw the mother nearby, separated from her baby by a six-foot fence. "Officer Blair was initially concerned that human contact might cause the mother to reject the fawn. Fortunately, the ACO assured him that this is a common myth," the police department said in a Facebook post. "With care and compassion, Officer Blair used a blanket to safely pick up the fawn and reunite it with its mother." During the overnight shift, Officer Blair came across a baby deer (fawn) lying in the road on Chapin Street. Concerned... Posted by Ludlow Police Department, MA on Monday, June 9, 2025 The mother and fawn were both able to walk away together, police said. What to do if you find a fawn alone Most fawns in Massachusetts are born in May or June, according to the division of Fisheries and Wildlife. Well-intentioned people who see a fawn alone might try to move it from the wild, but the agency advises against that. "If you find a fawn, the best thing you can do is leave it alone," the agency said in a statement issued last month. "The mother is likely nearby and continuing to check on the fawn." If the fawn appears visibly injured or is found with its dead mother, you should call MassWildlife at 508-389-6300 or the Environmental Police at 800-632-8075. In western Massachusetts, there is a project underway to build a wildlife crossing over the Mass Pike in Becket so that deer and other animals can safely cross the highway.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Leander Animal Services rescues baby raccoon and fawn
AUSTIN (KXAN) — Leander Animal Services was busy this week rescuing a few baby animals. Leander Police posted about the incidents on Facebook. On June 5, a delivery driver spotted a doe cross the road with a fawn running behind, but the fawn stumbled and fell into a storm drain. Leander Animal Services showed up and was able to remove the fawn, who had no injuries. The fawn was monitored into the early morning and was then reunited with its mom. Then, on June 6, Leander Animal Services was contacted about an 8-week-old raccoon who was separated from her family and stuck in a tree. The post from Leander Police said a man and his wife were walking when they heard something fall and hit the ground. That is when they spotted a raccoon and two babies running away, but the other baby was still in the tree. Leander Fire was then called in for assistance, and they used their ladder truck to get to the baby raccoon, but the raccoon decided to bypass being captured and jumped toward one of the firefighters. Animal Services was on the ground watching and was able to catch the baby in a net. This baby raccoon did not appear to be injured and was safely transferred from the net to a transport box. Then she was transported to MoonShine Wildlife Rehabilitation, where she will be cared for until she is old enough to be on her own. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.