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McGuire, Jess
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by
Matthew Cimitile
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last modified
Jan 27, 2025 10:04 PM
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filed under:
Northern Bobwhite Quail
Located in
Expertise Search
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McBrayer, Lisa
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by
Rosanne Hessmiller
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last modified
Feb 15, 2023 03:10 PM
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filed under:
Northern Bobwhite Quail
Located in
Expertise Search
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Keyser, Patrick
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by
admin
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published
Oct 02, 2012
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last modified
Feb 15, 2023 03:09 PM
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filed under:
Northern Bobwhite Quail
Located in
Expertise Search
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Dame, Sam
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by
Rosanne Hessmiller
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last modified
Feb 15, 2023 03:07 PM
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filed under:
Northern Bobwhite Quail
Located in
Expertise Search
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Native Grass College: Video series
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by
admin
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published
Dec 30, 2020
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last modified
Mar 05, 2022 01:54 AM
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filed under:
Livestock,
Grasses,
University,
Webinar,
Northern Bobwhite Quail,
Agriculture,
Grasslands
The Native Grass College offers short videos and resources for practitioner and landowners to learn how to 1) Establish Native Grasses, 2) Control Grass Competition, and 3) Manage grazing. Native grasses are better for grazing and for wildlife. Developed by Dr. Pat Keyser, Center for Native Grasslands Management at the University of Tennessee.
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Training
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Videos and Webinars
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Virtual tour: Native Warm Season Grass Grazing
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by
admin
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published
Dec 30, 2020
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last modified
Mar 04, 2022 04:54 PM
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filed under:
Working Lands,
Northern Bobwhite Quail,
Instructional Video,
Conservation,
Video,
Working Lands for Wildlife,
Landowner Information,
Grazing
Join a tour of pasture lands that use native warm season grasses to provide good grazing for livestock and invaluable habitat, food, and shelter for native wildlife. The video highlights the benefits of different native grasses and how quickly these grasses can benefit working lands.
Developed and provided by Ohio NRCS, Ohio State University Extension, the Madison Soil and Water Conservation District, and Quail/Pheasants Forever. Released September 2020.
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Training
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Videos and Webinars
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Woods for Wildlife: Native Plants of the Longleaf Pine Forest and Active Management of Early Successional Plant Communities
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by
admin
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published
Dec 30, 2020
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last modified
Jun 17, 2021 06:39 PM
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filed under:
NCSU,
Red-cockaded Woodpecker,
Northern Bobwhite Quail,
Webinar,
Forest Management,
Monarch Butterfly,
Land Management,
Landscape Conservation,
Longleaf Pine
Learn about the high diversity of plant species in the longleaf pine ecosystem and how to actively manage land to preserve this diversity. The presenters discuss how to maximize wildlife management goals through active management of early successional plant communities. Commonly referred to as early successional habitat, these plant communities benefit a vast array of wildlife species including the northern bobwhite quail, monarch butterfly, and red-cockaded woodpecker.
Located in
Training
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Videos and Webinars
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Private Land Stewardship Academy: Wildlife Lessons
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by
admin
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published
Jun 04, 2021
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filed under:
NRI,
WLFW,
Wild Pig,
Training,
Northern Bobwhite Quail,
Wildlife,
NRCS,
Western Chicken Turtle
The role of landowners as stewards of private lands and the public benefits derived from them is paramount. Most often successful land stewardship begins when natural resource professionals convey good land stewardship practices and techniques to private landowners. In this series of online lessons, learn about Wildlife and Wildlife Management -- from the Texas A&M Natural Resources Institute.
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Training
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Training Resources Exchange
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ANCHOR: An Opportunity to Change Landscape Connectivity Networks and Conservation Delivery At-Scale in the U.S.
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by
Rosanne Hessmiller
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published
Feb 23, 2025
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last modified
May 10, 2025 04:38 PM
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filed under:
Connectivity,
Omniscape,
Northern Bobwhite Quail,
Areawide Network,
Large Landscape,
Circuit Theory,
Native Grasslands,
ANCHOR
Abstract: Connectivity modeling has been a tool available to the conservation community
since the 1980s that guides our responses to habitat fragmentation. While the sophistication
of computer modeling continues to grow, on-the-ground delivery remains challenging and
lacks urgency. We present an approach to scale up delivery and do so within effective
timeframes. The approach, termed ANCHOR (Areawide Networks to Connect Habitat and
Optimize Resiliency), is grounded in connectivity science but executed in a manner that
is flexible, expandable, and measurable. ANCHOR goes beyond the traditional protected
area focus for establishing connected biomes to maximize the contributions of existing
public lands and expand private landowner participation. The approach is applied using
an umbrella species to represent a faunal group and/or multiple taxa to deliver co-benefits
of landscape connectivity. Public lands receive connectivity rankings that are then used to
engage potential connectivity partners who commit land units and collectively monitor
improvements in habitat quality and landscape resiliency. The ANCHOR approach can
guide unprecedented participation across agencies and departments to create public lands
networks, while private and corporate lands establish landscape connections. To illustrate
the approach, we present an example of native grasslands conservation in the central and
eastern U.S. and an emerging partnership with the Department of Defense.
Located in
ANCHOR Resources
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Northern Bobwhites and Fire: A Perfect Match
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by
Rhishja Cota
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published
Dec 30, 2020
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last modified
Apr 05, 2022 09:12 PM
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filed under:
Wildland Fire,
Northern Bobwhite Quail
Prescribed fire, bobwhite ecology, and local site conditions need to be aligned for optimal bobwhite population response. This course discusses the context of fire frequency, scale, and seasonality for bobwhite management and restoration.
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