On Wednesday the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service released its “2016 Trends in Duck Breeding Populations” report, based on surveys conducted in May and early June by USFWS and the Canadian Wildlife Service. According to the report, overall duck numbers in the survey area are statistically similar to last year and remain steady, meaning the upcoming waterfowl season should be a great one for hunters.

Total populations were estimated at 48.4 million breeding ducks in the traditional survey area—38 percent above the 1955-2015 long-term average. However, last year’s estimate was slightly higher at 49.5 million birds.

The projected mallard fall flight index is 13.5 million birds, similar to the 2015 estimate of 13.8 million.

After the report was announced, Ducks Unlimited reiterated that the main determining factor for duck breeding success is wetland and upland habitat conditions, both in the prairies and the boreal forest. Conditions observed across the U.S. and Canadian survey areas during the 2016 breeding population survey were generally poorer than last year. The total pond estimate for the U.S. and Canada combined was 5.0 million—21 percent below the 2015 estimate of 6.3 million but similar to the long-term average of 5.2 million.

 

“We must simply accept that habitat and populations are going to vary over time. They always have and they always will.”

 

“In light of the dry conditions that were observed across much of the northern breeding grounds during the survey period, it is reassuring to see that the breeding population counts were little changed from last year,” said DU Chief Scientist Scott Yaich. “But, with total pond counts similar to the long-term average and with hunting season and winter mortality being a relatively small part of annual mortality, it’s not surprising to see that populations largely held steady.

“What’s not reflected in the report is that there was fairly significant improvement in habitat conditions after the surveys were completed,” said Yaich. “In some key production areas, heavy June and July rains greatly improved wetland conditions. This could benefit brood rearing and the success of late-nesting species, as well as give a boost to overall production through re-nesting by early nesting species.

“Watching the changing habitat over the spring and summer this year underscores the importance of two things: First, we must simply accept that habitat and populations are going to vary over time. They always have and they always will. Second, that’s why we need to keep a steady hand on the course of our conservation efforts. Our job is to steadily make deposits into the habitat bank account so that when the precipitation and other conditions are right, the ducks will do the job that they do so well, which is to produce more ducks and provide us all a nice return on our investments.”

The spring surveys provide the scientific basis for many management programs across the continent, including hunting regulations. Individual states set their hunting seasons within a federal framework of season length, bag limits, and dates. Hunters should check the rules in their states for final dates and bag limits.

View all the data and get a species-by-species breakdown at ducks.org/ducknumbers.

Species estimates:

duckNumbersChart2016_mobile