South Dakota Annual Pheasant Survey Underway

UGUIDE

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PIERRE, S.D. â?? Itâ??s not always easy to make a connection between the dog days of August and South Dakotaâ??s annual pheasant hunting season, but the Game, Fish and Parks Department does that in a very big way with its annual pheasant brood route survey.

GFP staff survey 110 established routes from late July through mid-August to compare the observed number of roosters, hens and pheasant broods. The survey, conducted annually since 1949, is used to develop a comparison of pheasants-per-mile counts within specific areas surveys from previous years.

â??We will run each of these routes at least once in the next three weeks when the counting conditions are ideal,â?� said Travis Runia, GFPâ??s senior upland game biologist.. â??The results from this survey give our biologists excellent historical data as part of our pheasant population monitoring, and more importantly, give hunters a glimpse at what they should expect when they take to the fields this autumn.â?�

GFP staff drive the designated routes early in the morning. Pheasants gather along roadsides at that time to feed, gather grit to help digest food, and dry the morning dew from their feathers.


Runia said the brood route survey would be completed around Aug. 15, and it will take about two weeks after that to analyze data and present a report on the survey results. GFP will provide a pre-season, pheasants-per-mile index for each area and an overall average for the combined surveys at the end of August.

â??This survey has proven to be a very good indicator of trends in pheasant numbers,â?� Runia said. â??We are able to get a sense for what our pheasant numbers are doing based on route comparisons from last year and over a 10-year average.â?�

The 2009 brood route survey indicated that the South Dakota pheasant population had declined 26 percent from the 2008 observation. However, 2007 and 2008 produced two of the highest pheasant counts in more than 40 years. The 2009 survey was 13 percent higher than the 10-year average and was the fourth highest count per mile in the past 45 years.

GFP will post survey information online at www.gfp.sd.gov when available (approximately Sept. 1).
 
Just saying...

Your a young eager GF&P officer, your up at 5 AM sharp driving the gravel and you see a busy little brood scurry into the ditch, were there 5 or 6 chicks in that brood, not sure. Decisions... decisions, what should I write down?
 
Yesterday here in NC Wisconsin I had visited a sawmill, driving down the road and had to almost come to a complete stop to avoid a hen, 6 chicks and a rooster in the middle of the road. The chicks were good size, I would say 2/3 the size of the hen, but too stupid to get off the road. Another driver might have made roadkill of a few of that brood. It was exciting to see them, because we don't have much of a pheasant population up here. Maybe some released birds from last fall, but they reproduced!
 
whats your overall assessment Chris? I know its a broad question - but compared to years past how do you see this Fall shaping up?
 
whats your overall assessment Chris? I know its a broad question - but compared to years past how do you see this Fall shaping up?

Mike, I have more details here on the UGUIDE website

http://www.uguidesdpheasants.com/news/category/pheasant-outlook-forecast-report/

but overall I think we were encouraged by how many birds came through the winter and I think we will be equally encouraged by how good the broods are doing. The crops are ahead of schedule and could finish early mitigating the issues east river SD had last year. I mean crops out with a few birds is better than alot of birds with crops in IMHO.

There's also nesting and hatching goin on as we speak right up until labor day typically.

Aside from all that it is a mystery:D
 
Been cutting hay and am a little nervous. Normally a see a few chicks with momma running around. Have yet to see one. Maybe they are just smarter this year and get out of my way sooner.
 
Been cutting hay and am a little nervous. Normally a see a few chicks with momma running around. Have yet to see one. Maybe they are just smarter this year and get out of my way sooner.

MD, I can't speak for anything east of Mitchell and Aberdeen but I would assume the MN guys and yourself can provide good input. Don't worry, sometimes the birds are elsewhere. I think they like to hang out in shady corn when it gets hot and you won't see em in there. Not even on the edges.
 
MD, I was driving around the Britt area checking some duck ponds out to see if they were still shallow enough to wade through and saw about 30-40 chicks with about 10 or so hens and some roosters thrown in there as well. It made me fairly excited and we drove around a little longer but only saw 2 or 3 more. It did keep me away from a bachelor party for a little bit though, which may have been a good thing.
 
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