Whether they are spotted on private property or public land, wild animals and data about them cannot be “owned,” conservationists said at a Tuesday hearing. “I think I have the right … to both enjoy wildlife as a public resource, and have it continue to exist on my property and my neighbor’s property,” Drew Stevens, […]
NH Conservation Corps crew members remove the invasive glossy buckthorn in the Tioga River Wildlife and Conservation Area in Belmont on Tuesda…
Student Conservation Association Program Assistant Riley Holzhuter holds up a bag of glossy buckthorn berries in the Tioga River Wildlife and …
Glossy buckthorn grows in the Tioga River Wildlife and Conservation Area in Belmont on Tuesday morning. The invasive plant has rounded leaves …
Student Conservation Association Program Assistant Riley Holzhuter uses a hatchet to cut the roots of a glossy buckthorn shrub in the Tioga Ri…
NH Conservation Corps member Emily Pope removes the invasive glossy buckthorn with loppers in the Tioga River Wildlife and Conservation Area i…
NH Conservation Corps Member Kate Bertrand removes glossy buckthorn in the Tioga River Wildlife and Conservation Area in Belmont on Tuesday mo…
A pile of glossy buckthorn sits surrounded by birch trees in in the Tioga River Wildlife and Conservation Area in Belmont on Tuesday morning. …
Piles of glossy buckthorn sit on tarps in the Tioga River Wildlife and Conservation Area in Belmont on Tuesday morning. (Daniel Sarch/The Laco…
NH Conservation Corps member Kate Bertrand gets back to work after dumping glossy buckthorn in the disposal pile in the Tioga River Wildlife a…
