TAILIEUCHUNG - Best Management Practices for Trapping in the United States

The research on learning in informal (online) learning networks and communities (Ala- Mutka, 2010) concludes that social media applications provide easy, fast and efficient ways to access a great diversity of information and situated knowledge. They also provide learners with opportunities to develop their competences in collaboration with other learners, practitioners and stakeholders. Additionally, they allow individuals to acquire competences in a holistic manner, embedded in real-life contexts; and effectively and efficiently support competence building in a lifelong learning continuum. Research on informal learning activities in online networks and communities further suggests that informal Learning strategies facilitate. | Best Management Practices for Trapping in the United States ASSOCIATION of FISH gy WILDLIFE AGENCIES The Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies AFWA formerly the International Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies IAFWA was founded in 1902. It is an organization of public agencies charged with the protection and management of North America s fish and wildlife resources. The 50 state fish and wildlife agencies as well as provincial and territorial governments in Canada are members. Federal natural resource agencies in Canada and the United States are also members. The Association has been a key organization in promoting sound resource management and strengthening state provincial federal and private cooperation in protecting and managing fish and wildlife and their habitats in the public interest. Acknowledgements Best Management Practices BMPs for Trapping in the United States was written by the Furbearer Conservation Technical Work Group of the Association of Fish Wildlife Agencies. Development of this document would not have been possible without the cooperation and participation of many state wildlife agencies expert trappers and trapper organizations. State agency personnel provided on-the-ground coordination and supervision in those states where BMP trap testing occurred and many agency staff members provided constructive comments on earlier drafts of this document. We thank the wildlife veterinarians at the University of Georgia the University of Wyoming and Wildlife Health Associates who completed evaluations of captured animals. We thank the members of trapper associations individual trappers and technicians who took part in field-testing that supported the development of these BMPs. Their hard work and commitment to the continued improvement of trapping in the United States was an essential contribution to the success of this project. We also appreciate the involvement of the National Trappers Association from the inception of the BMP process and .

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