GLARRC The NSPD currently holds state department of education rules and regulations for Special education. Use the following Searches http://www.glarrc.org/Resources/NSPD.cfm
Extractions: A collaborative project of the National Association of State Directors of Special Education and the . This work is funded in part by the U.S. Department of Education Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP) The NSPD currently holds state department of education rules and regulations for Special Education. Use the following Searches: Command Based Query Menu Based Query Plain English Query Displays a text entry box in which you enter the words or phrases that you wish to locate combined with search operators Searches are entered by typing in words or phrases and choosing options from a menu Type in exactly what you need to know in plain English Help State and National Regulations Available for Search (use queries above) or for Download (click on individual states below) In most cases, state regulations have been translated to PDF by GLARRC. These files, available below for download, are NOT the official legal files. For the official copy of each state's regulations, please contact the state education agency.
Extractions: W YO . S TAT . ยง23-1-101 - Definitions of wildlife. (a) AS USED IN THIS ACT: (i) "Big game animal" means antelope, bighorn sheep, deer, elk, moose or mountain goat; (ii) "Exotic species" means any wild animals, including amphibians, reptiles, mollusks, crustaceans or birds not found in a wild, free or unconfined status in Wyoming; (iii) "Furbearing animal" means badger, beaver, bobcat, marten, mink, muskrat or weasel; (iv) "Game bird" means grouse, partridge, pheasant, ptarmigan, quail, wild turkey and migratory game birds; (v) "Game fish" means bass, catfish, crappie, grayling, ling, northern pike, perch, salmon, sauger, sunfish, trout, walleye or whitefish; (vi) "Migratory game bird" means all migratory game birds defined and protected under federal law; (vii) "Predacious bird" means English sparrow and starling; (viii) "Predatory animal" means coyote, jackrabbit, porcupine, raccoon, red fox, wolf, skunk or stray cat;
Ground Squirrels long tail. The brownish gray, obscurely dappled wyoming ground squirrel lives in mountain parks and sagebrushcovered basins. The http://wildlife.state.co.us/Education/mammalsguide/ground_squirrels.asp
Extractions: Personalize this site GROUND SQUIRRELS E very part of Colorado is home to at least one species of ground squirrel. On the grasslands of the eastern plains (and also in the southwest) are the thirteen-lined and spotted ground squirrels. Along the foothills and on western mesas and canyons lives the grizzled brown rock squirrel, with its distinctive long tail. The brownish gray, obscurely dappled Wyoming ground squirrel lives in mountain parks and sagebrush-covered basins. The white-tailed antelope squirrel lives in the hot desert shrublands of western valleys. And the golden-mantled ground squirrel lives throughout the mountains. All ground squirrels are active in the day; most are common and readily identified and observed. These are among our most popular nongame mammals. G round squirrels range in size from tiny spotted ground squirrels, barely larger than a chipmunk, to rock squirrels 20 inches long or as large as some tree squirrels. Ground squirrels feed mostly on seeds and fruits, although most will eat flowers, buds and some leaves and insects as available. In fact, the thirteen-lined ground squirrel thrives on grasshoppers in season, making it a valuable citizen on grazing lands. M ost ground squirrels mate in spring and have a single litter of a half dozen or more young a year after a gestation period of about a month. The rock squirrel is the exception to the rule, for females often have two litters. Most ground squirrels store fat for the winter and are deep hibernators. Again, the rock squirrel is an exception, arousing to feed periodically on stored seeds and acorns through the winter.