Trending Today ...
Michael Cox to perform at Hive Five Meadery

KINGMAN - Musician Michael Cox will be performing

EAA to host Young Eagles airplane school for

KINGMAN - The Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA) Chapter

Arizona business community warns of potential fallout from

PHOENIX—Arizona’s leading business organizations are urging the state’s

Havasu choir to perform famous broadway songs for

LAKE HAVASU CITY - If you love the

BLM plans a controlled burn in Hualapai Mountains

KINGMAN – Fire managers from the Bureau of Land

Diamondbacks kick off Opening Day March 27

PHOENIX - The Arizona Diamondbacks begin their 2025

Thank you for reading The Standard newspaper online!

AZGFD to host webcast on hunt management approaches Aug. 15

Constituents can submit questions, comments online from 6-7:30 p.m.

In an ongoing effort to better serve its constituents, the Arizona Game and Fish Department (AZGFD) will host a webcast to provide an update on existing hunt management approaches, recent projects and to gather public input.

Those who access the webinar from 6-7:30 p.m., Thursday, Aug. 15, will be able to submit questions, comments or concerns about existing hunt management approaches or hunt guidelines to Amber Munig, big game management supervisor, who will open the online discussion with a short presentation. Other department personnel also will be available during the webcast to address input as it relates to specific game management units (GMUs) or regions.

The webcast can be viewed at www.azgfd.gov/webcast,  or in person at AZGFD (Region III): 5325 N. Stockton Hill Road, Kingman.

The public can email questions during the webcast to AZHuntGuidelines@azgfd.gov. All questions pertaining to hunt management approaches or hunt guidelines will be addressed at the end of the presentation. 

The existing hunt management approaches or hunt guidelines provide the biological and social parameters used by wildlife biologists to develop annual hunt recommendations (season structures, season lengths, season dates, permits allocated, etc.). These recommendations result in the annual hunts in which licensed hunters may participate. 

While hunting opportunity is important, wildlife is held in the public trust; therefore, using science-based principles to shape the guidelines process remains paramount to ensure healthy, sustainable and diverse wildlife populations in perpetuity.

AZGFD continues to seek feedback on how to best meet the demands of the hunting public, while finding ways to develop new opportunities that help pass along our hunting heritage to future generations. 

For those who miss the webcast, it will be recorded and available to be viewed at https://www.azgfd.com/Hunting/Guidelines/. Additional comments can be emailed to AZHuntGuidelines@azgfd.gov