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Arkansas students can engage in wildlife art as part of the 10th annual Wildlife of Arkansas Student Art Contest that opened Monday. Director of community conservation with the Arkansas Wildlife Federation Sim Barrow spoke with Ozarks at Large's Kyle Kellams and said students can make their contributions online and can use any kind of wildlife for inspiration, from white-tailed deer to fish.
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On today's show, the first 2024 conversation with Michael Tilley from "Talk Business and Politics" covers planes leaving Fort Smith, river traffic passing along the Arkansas River and taking in some local nature. Also, a trip to a Northwest Arkansas Land Trust property. Plus, Becca Martin Brown wants locals to become more involved with art.
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On today's show, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service will decide whether to terminate federal protections for giant ivory-billed woodpeckers. Also, John Jeter, music director and conductor for the Fort Smith Symphony, listens to the Florence Price album he helped create. Plus, tracing the manufacturer's Daisy BB Guns from its beginnings in Michigan to present day Northwest Arkansas, and more.
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The latest population survey from the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission indicates promising numbers for future wild turkey population.
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USDA scientists have detected SARS-CoV-2 — the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 — in white-tail deer in a half dozen states. New published research…
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Wildlife experts are issuing advisories about an infectious disease killing Pine Siskins, a tiny migratory songbird which could possibly spread to other…
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This winter, a juvenile white American bison joined a herd of brown bison pastured for public view on Dogwood Canyon Nature Park. The 10,000 acre private…
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Last month, Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge in Eureka Springs welcomed a new resident. His name is Rambo the spotted hyena and he was rescued from…
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Tonight's Stigler Lecture in Archeology and Anthropology features Madonna L. Moss, professor of anthropological archeology at the University of Oregon.…
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Commercial wild turtle trapping remains legal in Arkansas, although it is outlawed in a growing number of states. However, public concern and pressure…