| Title: | The Hunting Notesfile |
| Notice: | Registry #7, For Sale #15, Success #270 |
| Moderator: | SALEM::PAPPALARDO |
| Created: | Wed Sep 02 1987 |
| Last Modified: | Tue Jun 03 1997 |
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
| Number of topics: | 1561 |
| Total number of notes: | 17784 |
I was catching up on some reading last night and ran into an
article on goose "shortstopping" that I thought some of you
would be interested in. It's from the Feb 90 issue of American
Hunter.
With the decline in the Maryland goose population the popular
explaination has been that the geese where stopping short in
their migration by the addition of refuges, etc north of
Maryland. Apparently the goose population was great in North
Carolina before the population rose in Maryland and everyone
assumed that same goose population just stopped short in their
annual migration to N.C.
They've done a study in Maryland that discounts the shortstopping
theory. Apparently 90% of the Maryland-banded geese returned
to the same area. This seems to indicate that this goose population
is separate from others in the east that are on the upswing.
The theory they proposed was that a goose population continues to
grow until hunting pressure picks up. Eventually, the hunting
pressure increases past the break even point and the goose
population begins a decline.
That seems to make a lot of sense. The part that really suprised me
was that it stated they need a 76% survival rate from spring through
winter to have a constant population. That seems incredibly high
for a bird that lays multiple eggs. Between 1967-74 the Maryland
goose survival rate was 82%. In 1986 it was 63%.
Mark,
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 636.1 | WJOUSM::PAPPALARDO | Thu Apr 12 1990 14:02 | 8 | ||
Mark,
Does the 82% mean 8 of 10 eggs go on to become adults or 2 of 10 birds
are killed by hunters and natural, un-natural deaths.
Rick
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| 636.2 | CLUSTA::STORM | Fri Apr 13 1990 11:50 | 8 | ||
That was what I was wondering as well. It makes more sense to me if
that is the percentage that survives hunting season (and still high at
that). The article said survived "from spring through winter", which
would imply that percentage of eggs became adults that survived through
hunting season.
Mark,
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