FISH AND WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT
These were the REQUIREMENTS before the REVISIONS
which were made when a new merit badge pamphlet was issued during
2004 after the 2004 edition of BOY SCOUT REQUIREMENTS was issued.
The requirements below remain current until December
31, 2004.
Until that date, Scouts starting the merit badge
may use EITHER the requirements below, or those in the new pamphlet,
at their option, but may not "mix and match" requirements from both
sets. They should finish the merit badge with whichever set they
choose. If they start using the requirements below, they can
continue using them until they complete the badge or turn 18.
To see the current requirements
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- Describe the meaning and purposes of fish and wildlife conservation
and management.
- List and discuss at least three major problems that continue
to threaten your state's fish and wildlife resources.
- Describe some practical ways in which everyone can help
with the fish and wildlife effort.
- List and describe five major fish and wildlife management
practices used by managers in your state.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Construct, erect, and check regularly at least two artificial
nest boxes (wood duck, bluebird, squirrel, etc.) and keep
written records for one nesting season.
- Construct, erect, and check regularly bird feeders and
keep written records of the kinds of birds visiting the
feeders in the wintertime.
- Design and implement a back-yard wildlife habitat improvement
project and report the results.
- Design and construct a wildlife blind near a game trail,
waterhole, salt lick, bird feeder, or birdbath and take
good photographs or make sketches from the blind of any
combination of 10 wild birds, mammals, reptiles, or amphibians.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Observe and record 25 species of wildlife. Your list
may include mammals, birds, reptiles, or fish. Write down
when and where each animal was seen.
- List the wildlife species in your state that are classified
as endangered, threatened, exotic, game species, furbearers,
or migratory game birds.
- Start a scrapbook of North American wildlife. Insert
markers to divide the book into separate parts for mammals,
birds, reptiles, and fish. Collect articles on such subjects
as life histories, habitat, behavior, and feeding habits
on all four categories and place them in your notebook accordingly.
Articles and pictures may be cut from old discarded newspapers;
science, nature and outdoor magazines; or can be photocopied
from other sources. Enter at least 10 articles on mammals,
10 on birds, 5 on reptiles, and 5 on fish. Put each animal
in alphabetical order. Include pictures whenever possible.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Determine the age of five species of fish from scale
samples or identify various age classes of one species in
a lake and report the results.
- Conduct a creel census on a small lake to estimate catch
per unit effort.
- Examine the stomach contents of three species of fish
and record the findings.
- Make a freshwater aquarium. Include at least four species
of native plants and four species of animal life, such as
whirligig beetles, freshwater shrimp, tadpoles, water snails,
and golden shiners. After 60 days or observation, discuss
with your counselor the life cycles, food chains, and management
needs you have recognized.
BSA Advancement ID#: 51
Pamphlet Revision Date: 1990 (2004)
Requirements last updated in 1987
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