Studies show that birds currently generate nearly $20 billion and create more than 234,000 jobs in the United States. Fish and Wildlife Service also reports that birds can generate more than $1 billion in state and federal tax revenues to the United States. If there are less birds this can mean lower retail sales, less tax revenue, fewer jobs, and lost economic opportunities. We need to save the birds in the United States. Duck Unlimited (DU) is an organization that helps fight for the safety of ducks and their livelihood.
Duck Unlimited claims that “they’re world's leader in wetlands and waterfowl conservation” (DU). Ducks Unlimited started back in 1937 during the dust bowl. This made all the water and land dry up, leading to ducks dying
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Couple reason why you should get involved is “Waterfowl, like all organisms, are intimately linked to the ecosystems in which they evolved. Understanding these relationships and assuring environmental conditions that support each species are crucial to successful waterfowl conservation. This is the fundamental business of Ducks Unlimited” (DU Plan). This is how they go about things and how they need to fix them. Going out there you will learn that different types of ducks living in their own ways. DU they do not just go a fill up a pond of water and call it good. “Ducks Unlimited is the leader in the conservation of habitats that are essential to North America’s waterfowl and countless other species of plants and animals. Because they cross an enormous scope of geography, waterfowl and other migratory species have especially complex needs. The continent’s 36 species of ducks, 10 species of geese, and 2 species of swans depend on a broad array of wetland and upland habitats at each phase of their annual cycle” (DU plan). Going off this quote that is all the ducks that they have to worry about and when you go out and help they will teach and tell you all about the ducks and how they all live different. This group helps you see that ducks have a purpose, you don't just look at it and say look at that stupid thing. There is a reason for them just like how you think you
I live in Houma, Louisiana so I have tons of experience with the bayou region of South Louisiana. Everywhere I look in Houma there is a bayou, which is a good and bad thing. With a bayou comes many great things such as Egrets, Spanish Moss, etc. The bad thing about seeing many bayous is that it is a constant reminder that one day, Houma might be a part of the Gulf of Mexico. Also my dad’s side of the family is from Chauvin and Golden Meadow which is not too far from where the real damage of eroding wetlands is. I go down to Chauvin sometimes to visit my Nanny and her husband. I always see houses on stilts because of possible flooding that could come if a hurricane passes through. One of the issues that Mike Tidwell caught my interest was that the wildlife in bayous will one day be diminished into smaller numbers. That is because the eroding land causes brown shrimp, crabs, and other seafood to die out. Many residents in South Louisiana make a living off of seafood so to have most of that industry die out will hurt the economy of South Louisiana. I just found this issue very interesting.
...n, the Louisiana wetlands are an extremely valuable asset to the State of Louisiana and the United States. The continual loss of Louisiana wetlands has the potential to have an immensely negative effect on the economy at a state and national level. Over 2 million people live in the Louisiana coastal parishes (Field et al., 1991). The majority of people living on the Louisiana coast make their living from things that are directly related to the wetlands. The Louisiana wetlands make up the largest wetland community in America and is being lost at a rate greater than the other wetland communities in the country. The suggested strategies that are being taken into consideration could be helpful but it seems that the State of Louisiana is not as concerned as it should be given the future consequences and much like climate change coastal erosion is not being taken serious.
The U.S annual per capita consumption of poultry has risen dramatically during the past 40 years from 26.3 pounds to almost 80 pounds in 1990.
My hypothesis that ducks have feelings is based off my own observations while using texts from other sources to support it. I used the article “Yes, Animals Have Feelings” which discusses how animals do have feelings to support my hypothesis. Balcombe states, “Their desire for rewards is part of sentience — the capacity to feel” (Balcombe). While observing the ducks I wrote down their behaviors and linked them with an emotion. Some of the emotions I saw in the ducks were happiness, trust, and caring. One of the observations I made was when many of the ducks were in the pond. The ducks would chase each other around in the pond as if they were playing. Before they began chasing each other I watched to see if there was a reason behind it such as taking food away from the other duck or irritating the duck in anyway. I did not notice any type of
Michael Cain is an attorney for the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (WDNR) and he came to talk to us about the evolution of the public trust doctrine in Wisconsin dealing with navigable water and current development issues related to the public trust. The doctrine states that a sizable body of common law has developed which holds that all navigable waters are held in trust by the state for the public and through the DNR Department of Justice and District Attorneys they have an affirmative duty to protect these public trust waters. With the increase in recreational and developmental pressures the amount of aquatic resources diminishes increasing the importance of this issue and the grounds of the public trust doctrine. This is important because the doctrine provides the foundation for preserving aquatic natural resources for the future.
In America public trust is a huge deal, it’s what gives us all our public parks, national to county level. Public trust is defined as, a governments duty as a trustee to protect publicly owned resources. Matters of public trust are decided in state courts so resulting action can vary from state to state. For a government to violate the public trust the land or resource in question must make a shift from public to private without proper compensation for what the public will now be missing out on. This is exactly what is going on in this case. The water and the subsequent water level is the resource in peril. The reservoir physically holding that water is what changes it from public water to private water since no farmers can use what is all kept up upriver. With the ESA suit provision the public (farmers) has legal standing to sue based on a violation of the public trust, which lead to unfavorable economic conditions for them. With this provision and the ruling on the case the ESA was recognized as a tool for environmentalist and competing users of natural resources alike to challenge government
Mr. Middleton, a journalist, compiled an article describing, in his opinion, the flaws of the Endangered Species Act. He then attempts to back his opinion with studied analyses, researched facts, and testimonies. To summarize Middleton’s (2011) perspective, “Rather than provide incentives for conservation and environmental stewardship, the Endangered Species Act punishes those whose property contains land that might be used as habitat by endangered and threatened species” (p. 79). This quote is broad and generalized yet draws in readers and forces Middleton to spend the rest of the article backing this statement with more logic based facts.
8. Taylor, Dan. 1998. Audubon Society Inspired to Action by Bird Die -offs . 17 Jan. 1998 . E-mail . Available bkus@sunstroke.sdsu.edu
Duck Dynasty is the number one rated cable television show on the A& E Network. The Robertson’s are a large close knit family that are a devoutly religious and often share their religious beliefs with their viewers. Not only do the Robertson’s have a successful television show, they also have a multi-million dollar business called Duck Commander. Duck Commander became famous for their duck calls and their success has excelled from there. Because of their fame and fortune the family is often thrust into the public spectrum through interviews with the media.
The piping plover, a bird now going extinct, was once very bountiful. When an animal is going extinct, it could mean a lot of things. The Piping Plover is an endangered species. An endangered species is a name for a plant or animal that is slowly dying out. This bird is experiencing population drops, so it is called endangered. It is known to scientists as the Charadrius Melodus (ES: Piping Plover). It mainly resides around the Great Lakes and sometimes lives along the Atlantic coast in Canada and the United States (Piping Plover Page). Piping plovers are sometimes found in Alberta as well (ES: Piping Plover). People used to hunt this bird for sport, or for it’s feathers, which was a leading cause of its dramatic decline in population (Piping Plover Page). Piping plovers always return to the spot in which they were born, and find females to breed with (Piping Plover Page). They woo the female, and mate with her, producing eggs. Many efforts are being made to maintain, and increase the population of this struggling bird, and so far, they have maintained the species very well.
...ughout much of their continent-wide breeding range is proof that to manage wildlife; you need to manage their ecosystems. Wet weather, combined with abundant nesting cover provided by the federal Conservation Reserve Program, have shown that wetland and grassland ecosystems are what make or break duck populations. The same is true for all other species, game and non-game. (R. Holmes). (1)
My passion for duck hunting began when I met Bruce, a friend of my dad's who introduced me to the sport. He is a phenomenal man who really has a brilliant knowledge in the sport of duck hunting.
...responsible for billions of dollars of the regions economy. The government is right in its decision to do anything within reason to help the revival and preservation of the Sound. I am an environmentalist and am very pro- nature and wildlife. I feel that if we as humans are destroying and polluting the Sound, it is our responsibility to join in the effort to restore it for generations of people and wildlife to come.
In the past hundred years, the human race has expanded almost everything in the United States of America, such as our agriculture practices, the size of our cities, and the sheer amount of expansion in business and it has affected one group of animals in particular, waterfowl. Due to these advancements, the human race has caused the climate to change, and according to an research by Jennifer Reilly “Climate change is an global problem that affects all species of waterfowl and the wetlands they inhabit” (Reilly 2017). Humans have impacted the life of waterfowl in such extreme levels of magnitude, that humans have almost become part of waterfowls life. Cites have become almost refuges for geese as mentioned in the study titled Survival
del Hoyo, Josep, Andrew Elliott and Jordi Sargatal. Handbook of the Birds of the World. Vol 1, Ostrich to Ducks. Barcelona: Lynx Edicions, 1992.