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(Provided by IDNR)

The Indiana DNR confirmed the presence of a black bear in and around Corydon in southern Indiana.

The bear was first reported around 9 p.m. Sunday. Indiana Conservation Officers received a call from a Harrison County homeowner of a bear going through the caller's garbage.

Conservation officers, sheriff's deputies and local animal control officers responded but did not locate a bear. On Monday morning, the bear was observed by several people, including conservation officers, in areas near State Road 62 and later in Corydon.

The sighting comes roughly a year after a black bear wandered into northwest Indiana from Michigan. That bear was the first verified presences of a bear in Indiana in more than 140 years. After spending several weeks in Indiana, the bear returned to Michigan.

Young black bears are known to disperse in the springtime as they seek new territory in which to settle. The bear is most likely wild and swam across the Ohio River from Kentucky. Kentucky has an expanding bear population.


(Provided by IDNR)

The DNR Division of State Parks is seeking volunteer hunters to participate in managed deer reduction hunts at 18 locations later this year.

They are: Brown County, Chain O'Lakes, Charlestown, Clifty Falls, Fort Harrison, Indiana Dunes, McCormick's Creek, Ouabache, Pokagon, Prophetstown, Shakamak, Spring Mill, Summit Lake, Tippecanoe River, Turkey Run, Versailles, and Whitewater Memorial state parks, and Cave River Valley Natural Area (drawn in conjunction with Spring Mill).

Clifty Falls and Fort Harrison will be archery only reduction hunts.

The dates are Nov. 14-15 and Nov. 28-29.


(Provided by IDNR)

Shakamak, Kickapoo and Lenape lakes in Shakamak State Park now have a 14-inch minimum length limit for black bass.

The change became effective July 1 as a way to help control gizzard shad populations in the park. The park is located in southwestern Indiana.

The previous regulation involved a 12- to 15-inch slot limit. It was enacted to encourage anglers to harvest more largemouth bass, thereby increasing the size of remaining bass.

The new regulation will result in decreased bass harvest. Decreased bass harvest will lead to increased predation on gizzard shad, helping protect panfishing at all three lakes.


(Provided by IDNR)

Buying licenses online will be easier and more convenient for hunters, anglers and trappers thanks to a new system that the DNR will launch this week.

The new system at www.INHuntFish.com requires customers 18 and older to create an online account. Customers can use the account to purchase their licenses, purchase or redeem gift certificates, acquire their Harvest Information Program (HIP) number, and make donations.

Having information saved to an account makes purchasing future licenses much easier for yourself and for any children under age 18 that you list as an associate. If you're already a DNR customer, use your Customer ID located on the top left of your license to log in.


(Provided by IDNR)

Now that aquatic plants have returned to Lake Webster, the DNR is relaxing limits on how much weed control will be permitted this summer at the 774-acre lake in Kosciusko County.

Caps on how many acres of vegetation can be chemically treated by local residents were put in place six years ago after a lake-wide project that wiped out many plants, muddied the water, and upset anglers.

Since then the plant community has rebounded to the point that some areas, if left untreated, may not be usable by boaters or anglers.

On May 4 lake residents hired a licensed pesticide applicator to treat 155 acres of Eurasian water milfoil, a species capable of forming dense mats on the surface.