http://migratorybirds.fws.gov/reports/reports.html
Now, all the numbers that have been coming out in the past few days through newspaper, or DU, or Delta came from a report on this page about 5 lines down entitled trends in duck breeding populations 1955-2004. It's a PDF, so if you save it before looking at it, you can move through it quicker. This report gives 2 very important numbers to decide the season.
1. Canadian pond counts, which is used by the AHM. This is the only pond count number that matters for season length. it was 2.5 million for this year.
2. The Mallard Breeding population for the "traditional survey region" This is everything but the great lakes. This number plus the great lakes mallard counts are added together to get the numbers for the total mallard breeding pop used to make season frameworks. Total duck numbers, while important to know, are not at all considered when making the season. Only mallard, and only mid continent, the eastern is seperate.
We have not been told the great lakes mallard count yet. needs to be > 824,701 for 60 day (liberal) framework.
To look at how the seasons have been set and will be set, click on the link that says adaptive management. That will take you to another page, scroll down and look at the USFWS annual reports. This is the report of the federal committee that actually sets the seasons. page 6 will tell you about the mallard count from the last few years. The heading traditional survey is everything highlighted at the top of the page except the great lakes. The heading state survey is the great lakes. add them together and that is the number used to calculate mallard breeding population, which is the number used on the framework grid to determine the season. (seee page 20). The other side of the grid is the pond count number, and it is made up of the canadian pond counts only. This year was 2.5 million, which we got from the first report.
if you look hard enough, you will notice that our own scott baker is part of the AHM working group comittee.
I know this is longwinded, but I thought some of you might be interested in looking at the numbers themselves and reading about the AHM. I like to dig through the data and figure out where the numbers are coming from, so it was pretty cool. there is lots of population statistics, but I just pass by those.
Hope this helps
