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Page 28 - வர்ஜீனியா துறை ஆஃப் வனவிலங்கு வளங்கள் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

News to Know for March 4: Second vaccine shipment arrives; Relief bill latest; Partly to mostly sunny

News to Know for March 4: Second vaccine shipment arrives; Relief bill latest; Partly to mostly sunny By the end of the month, state health officials say vaccine supply will increase in a significant way. (Source: WMBF NEWS) By Adrianna Hargrove | March 4, 2021 at 6:58 AM EST - Updated March 4 at 6:58 AM RICHMOND, Va. (WWBT) - Take a look at our top headlines before you start your day! Sunny & Breezy Highs will be in the mid-50s. Thursday forecast: Sunny and Breezy Hopewell Water Rescue Update Crews from multiple agencies, including Chesterfield County Fire & EMS’s dive team, Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources and Virginia Marine Police searched all day by air and on water.

Va Dept of Wildlife Resources prepares for peak fishing season

Va. Dept. of Wildlife Resources prepares for peak fishing season Peak fishing season is almost here, and the Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources is preparing. (Source: Pexels) By Courtney Guiry | March 4, 2021 at 8:58 AM EST - Updated March 4 at 12:35 PM HARRISONBURG, Va. (WHSV) - Peak fishing season is almost here, and the Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources is preparing. Each year, from October through May over one-million trout are grown at hatcheries, then are spread out over 180 waterways throughout the commonwealth. “We stock three different species of trout in the state,” Brad Fink, fisheries biologist for DWR, said . “Brook trout, which is our native trout, we also stock rainbow trout and brown trout, depending on the waterbody.”

Saving Endangered Streams & the Species that Depend on Them

3:57 “It’s a combination of knowing that Roanoke logperch is there and having that resource concern that we were able to address.” The North Fork of the Roanoke River traverses Montgomery County. Its meandering beauty won it a designation as a National Rural Historic District. But multi use water ways don’t repair themselves, and the wear and tear from all kinds of activities, takes its toll.   It can cost thousands to hundreds of thousands of dollars, even millions in some parts of the state, to protect the water and keep it clean. “And a lot of times what happens is the landowner starts to realize that they’re losing a lot of topsoil,” says Mike Pinder is an aquatic biologist with the Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources.  “And a lot of the stream is cutting away in sections and large sections of the property are falling into the Creek and washing away.”

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