-
The North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission said its anonymous reporting program, NC WILDTIP, has been helpful in apprehending poachers since launching last year.
-
The North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission鈥檚 plan lays out a 鈥渙ne-stop shop鈥 on the past and future of the Virginia big-eared bat.
-
As snakes become active amid summer heat, the North Carolina Poison Control said the reported number of venomous snakebites are already ahead of where they were this time of year in 2020, the state's largest year.
-
A video of people pulling bear cubs from a tree in North Carolina has prompted an investigation, but a state official says no charges will be filed. The North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission says staff responded to a report of people harassing bear cubs at an Asheville apartment complex on Tuesday.
-
A new hunting education program targets university students to cultivate the next, more diverse generation of hunters.
-
Increased howling can be expected this time of year, as young coyotes set off on their own.
-
North Carolina Wildlife Resource Commission officials have some safety tips to help the public avoid any problems with the bears.
-
Coyotes are everywhere in North Carolina.C'mon, "everywhere?" Really? Yes, really. To borrow from a commonly used expression: you can't swing a cat鈥
-
If you鈥檝e come across a nine-banded armadillo anywhere in North Carolina, wildlife officials want to hear about it. Since first appearing in Macon County鈥
-
For the first time in decades, some hunters will get the chance to harvest an alligator in select parts of Hyde County this fall. Alligators are federally鈥