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Wyoming offers a lot of angling diversity. Several species of trout swim in the state's many lakes and streams. There are walleye in many reservoirs, and kokanee salmon continue to grow in popularity among anglers. But what about largemouth bass?
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Hooked on Learning: More than 1,500 Wyoming students participated in Trout in the Classroom program
Hundreds of trout found homes in Wyoming waters this season thanks to students and teachers participating in a new conservation education program. Trout in the Classroom is a partnership between the Wyoming Game and Fish Department and Trout Unlimited where students and teachers raise rainbow trout in their classrooms over the course of a semester.
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Kickstart your conservation career at the Wyoming Collegiate Conservation Symposium
Are you interested in a career in conservation? The Wyoming Game and Fish Department invites current college students and recent graduates to Whiskey Mountain Conservation Camp in Dubois Aug. 8-11 to learn how to pursue a successful career in the outdoors at the newly created Wyoming Collegiate Conservation Symposium camp.
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Watercraft inspection stations are open across Wyoming and on the lookout for AIS
Watercraft inspection stations across Wyoming have opened for the boating season and are on the lookout for aquatic invasive species. By the end of May, four watercraft harboring invasive mussels were intercepted coming into the state by the Wyoming Game and Fish Department. Two of those watercraft traveled through the Interstate-80 Evanston check station.
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Sportsperson Hotline: (307) 777-4600 | Open 8 a.m.- 5 p.m. MT Monday-Friday
The Wyoming Game and Fish Department manages and conserves more than 800 species of fish and wildlife across Wyoming. For nearly 120 years, we’ve carried out our mission to conserve wildlife and serve people. Through these efforts, the Wyoming Game and Fish Department ensures the public continues to enjoy Wyoming’s vast fish and wildlife resource through hunting, fishing, trapping, wildlife watching and other forms of outdoor recreation. Hunters, anglers and wildlife watchers contribute over a billion dollars to Wyoming’s economy each year.
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