By Laura
Martin MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Six months of preparation earned a team of four
Mississippi teenagers a trip to Kansas and a second place
win at the 1999 4-H Wildlife Habitat Evaluation Program
National Contest. The
Lowndes County 4-H team received higher honors at the Aug. 1
competition than any other Mississippi team in years past.
They also placed first in the wildlife management plan team
activity. Contestants
representing 25 states braved 100 degree weather during the
contest in the Flint Hill region of eastern Kansas. WHEP is
a 4-H youth natural resource program dedicated to teaching
wildlife and fisheries habitat management to youth ages 8
through 19. Bethany
Daniel, a 17-year-old senior at Columbus High School, said
the national competition helped her because so much of the
information is useful. "It is important for people to be
educated on how to better the environment," she said. "We
need to learn to live together without wiping out
animals." Ninety-four
contestants individually judged the suitability of habitat
for wildlife species through on-site evaluation and aerial
photographs. Sabrina Strait was the second high individual
overall with a first place finish in the individual rural
wildlife management practices. Daniel placed seventh high
individual on aerial photograph interpretation for wildlife
habitats. Other team members included Terry Priester and
Matthew Evans. As teams
they also wrote urban and rural wildlife management plans
for nine wildlife and fish species. Other activities
included wildlife food identification and writing a team
urban wildlife management plan. "The
volunteer adults were fantastic coaches, and we were lucky
to have such qualified leaders," Daniel said. Two volunteer
leaders, Debby Martin and Inez Saum, encouraged the youth to
prepare for the contest. Martin has helped prepare WHEP
teams for seven years and works with the U.S. Department of
Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation
Services. "It
takes a lot on the part of the kids," Martin said. "This
group wanted to do it. I think it was the challenge. Getting
to go to a national contest was a big incentive." The
group started in February with weekly workshops. The team
was chosen at the county contest in April to represent the
Lowndes County in the North State contest in May. In June,
the state competition was held at Mississippi State
University. "In
Kansas we had 10 different animals that we were not familiar
with," Martin said. "It is an entirely different ecosystem.
The contestants had to listen carefully to the tours and
decide on the type of management that would be best for that
environment." "The
Mississippi team had a really good mix of young people who
worked well together," said Dean Stewart, Extension wildlife
specialist and a member of the national WHEP committee.
"When you bring different backgrounds and opinions together
you get a better result. They trained hard and knew the
material well." "They
don't realize how much they learn," Martin said. "They learn
to work with others at the team events. It is a challenge to
have four people working together. They also learned about
giving presentations and logical thinking." Mississippi
team sponsors were Chevron, MSU, the Lowndes County
Cattlemen and the Lowndes County 4-H Advisory Council.
National sponsors were Champion International, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, the National Rifle Association and the
Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation. "I would
love to see more teams involved," said Jared Quillen,
wildlife and fisheries Extension assistant. "We will send
another team to the national event next year. It's always a
fun trip. We've had a good number, but I would love to have
a team representing every county." Anyone
interested in wildlife and wildlife management and the
Wildlife Habitat Evaluation Program should contact their
county Extension agent for more details. Released:
Sept. 20, 1999
Forestry,
Wildlife & Fisheries News
State 4-H Team
Wins Second At Nationals
Contact: Dean Stewart, (662) 325-3174
Visit: DAFVM
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