Game Fish

"Game and Fish Agencies Ramp Up for Fall Hunting Season: Expanding Youth Access, Protecting Fisheries, and Restoring Habitats"


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Across the United States, Game and Fish agencies are taking significant action as the fall hunting season approaches. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission has approved an expansion of youth turkey hunts on more than one hundred wildlife management areas, extending the season from a weekend to four days in order to increase opportunities for young hunters. Additionally, Florida has implemented new protections for bonefish, prohibiting fishing in a key pre-spawning area east of Elliott Key in Biscayne National Park during critical months, and has adjusted boundaries in John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park to enhance coral habitat protection while maintaining access for lobster harvests. Florida also recently reopened Apalachicola Bay’s oyster fishery with an adaptive management framework that ties harvest levels directly to oyster abundance, a move intended to foster ongoing reef recovery. Bay scallop season also opened August sixteenth in the Gulf County zone, with harvest rules firmly in place according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

Meanwhile, the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish has begun selling over-the-counter hunting and fishing licenses for the 2025 to 2026 season. They are also actively conducting wildlife law violation checkpoints as the busy season ramps up. The department held its latest Game Commission meeting in mid-August, addressing regulatory updates and habitat restoration in response to recent wildfires. The Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission is preparing for its August meeting, where fisheries improvement projects and big-game license allocations are on the agenda. Public comment on amendments and regulations is being actively sought, reflecting increased attention to transparency.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is distributing over fifty-five million dollars through the State Wildlife Grant Program to state wildlife agencies, with funds dedicated to habitat management, research, and conservation work that benefit both fish and wildlife. These grants complement an additional twenty-three million dollars in National Fish Habitat Partnership funds, which support on-the-ground fish habitat conservation projects in twenty-nine states. Project priorities this year include removing barriers to fish passage, restoring stream banks, curbing erosion, and counteracting drought impacts.

In Arkansas, preparations are underway for the thirty-fourth annual Outdoor Hall of Fame banquet in Little Rock, set for August twenty-third. This event honors conservation leaders and raises significant funds for the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission’s conservation initiatives. These recent stories reveal a nationwide focus on broadening youth hunting access, scientifically managing sensitive fish stocks, investing in habitat restoration, and celebrating the work of conservation stewards. Collectively, these actions illustrate the dynamic and adaptive approaches U.S. Game and Fish agencies are taking to safeguard wildlife, habitats, and traditions as new challenges and opportunities emerge.

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