Dogs may be used to course or to help flush, herd, drive, track, point at, pursue or retrieve prey
Driving is the herding of animals in a particular direction, usually toward another hunter in the group
Flushing is the practice of scaring animals from concealed areas
Glassing is the use of optics (such as binoculars) to more easily locate animals
Glue is an indiscriminate passive form to kill birds
Internet hunting is a method of hunting over the internet using webcams and remotely controlled guns
Netting, including active netting with the use of cannon nets and rocket nets
Persistence hunting is the use of running and tracking to pursue the prey to exhaustion.
Scouting includes a variety of tasks and techniques for finding animals to hunt
Spotlighting or shining is the use of artificial light to find or blind animals before killing
Stalking or still hunting is the practice of walking quietly, in search of animals or in pursuit of an individual animal
Tracking is the practice of reading physical evidence in pursuing animals
Trapping is the use of devices (snares, pits, deadfalls) to capture or kill an animal