Wildlife in Arkansas

Why Arkansas’ best duck hunting woods are drowning

KUAR | By Ariana Remmel

Wildlife management areas are protected public land set aside by the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission to conserve The Natural State’s wildlife and promote outdoor recreation. Hurricane Lake WMA is best known for its greentree reservoirs, human-made wetland structures that attract ducks — and duck hunters — from miles around.

Levees built around the forest are designed to hold water on the forest floor, imitating the seasonal flooding that occurred naturally in bottomland hardwood forests across the Mississippi Delta before dams and levees tamed the major rivers. Most of those ancient bottomland woods were long ago cleared for timber and to make way for agriculture.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2022-03-08/why-arkansas-best-duck-hunting-woods-are-drowning

Arkansas Game And Fish Commission

DUCK CAPITAL: More mallards spend their winter in Arkansas than any other state in the country.

Arkansas Game and Fish Commission's Work Crosses Multiple Fronts

From managing the state’s populations of wildlife, lakes, rivers and land to providing ongoing, conservation education that connects Arkansans to the outdoors, the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission isn’t slowing down in the face of COVID-19.

https://www.arkansasbusiness.com/article/132533/arkansas-game-and-fish-commissions-work-crosses-multiple-fronts

SPONSORED: Arkansas Game and Fish Commission's Work Crosses Multiple Fronts

Pandemic or no, the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission isn't staying idle during these challenging times. The work is too important. From managing the state's populations of wildlife, lakes, rivers and land to providing ongoing, conservation education that connects Arkansans to the outdoors, the AGFC isn't slowing down in the face of COVID-19.