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Who is my Texas Senator?
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Source: Texas Outdoors
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Found in:
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Created: 11/28/2007 16:38
Summary: Weekly migratory bird hunting reports are posted from early September through early February.
Source: Texas Outdoors
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Found in:
News
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Created: 12/24/2007 15:46
Summary: Weekly migratory bird hunting reports are posted from early September through early February.
Source: Texas Outdoors
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Found in:
News
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Created: 12/24/2007 15:58
Summary: TPWD’s Top 10 Texas Conservation News Stories of 2007
Source: Texas Outdoors
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Found in:
News
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Created: 02/27/2008 13:51
Summary: Texas Wetland Conservation Newsletter
Source: Texas Outdoors
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Found in:
News
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Created: 02/27/2008 17:01
Summary: Trout anglers get an extra bonus this year as the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department will stock additional hatchery-reared rainbow trout at seven sites from Feb. 22 to March 7.
Source: Texas Outdoors
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Found in:
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Created: 03/03/2008 15:40
Summary: Anglers, paddlers, birders, waterfowl hunters, scientists and other conservation-minded Texans are invited to nominate representatives to local stakeholder advisory committees charged with determining and recommending flow regimes adequate to "support a sound ecological environment" for Texas rivers, bays and estuaries.
Source: Texas Outdoors
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Found in:
News
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Created: 05/04/2008 16:00
Summary: Bonus Grants Round Set for June 2
Source: Texas Outdoors
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Found in:
News
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Created: 05/10/2008 11:01
Summary: Dr. Larry McKinney, known affectionately as "Dr. Doom" for his candid, outspoken approach to addressing environmental issues, is leaving the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department a legacy not built on despair, but on hope.
Source: Texas Outdoors
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Found in:
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Created: 05/26/2008 15:12
Summary: Game Warden Alan Biggerstaff of Conroe has been named the 2008 Southern States Boating Officer of the Year for Texas.
Source: Texas Outdoors
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Found in:
News
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Created: 07/14/2008 15:30
Summary: Most reports of mountain lion sightings in Texas are never verified with physical evidence, although such reports can arouse fear and cause a local publicity stir, according to wildlife experts with the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department.
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