HARRISBURG – Pennsylvania Game Commission biologists expect ruffed grouse
hunting to be average to slightly-below average for the nearly 100,000 hunters
who annually pursue these challenging game birds.
“Conditions
for over-wintering, incubating and brooding should have supported good
reproduction this year,” said Lisa Williams, Game Commission grouse and woodcock
biologist. “However, our Game Commission field staff observed fewer adult grouse
and grouse broods this summer compared to prior years. Those sightings are often
the best predictor of the season, so I advise hunters to hope for the best but
keep their expectations realistic. Find areas of good dense cover and abundant
food supply and you’ll put yourself in the best position for success.”
The first segment of the state’s
three-part grouse season opens Saturday, Oct. 13, and runs through Nov. 24. The
season reopens Dec. 10 to 24, and then again from Dec. 26 to Jan. 26.
Participating hunters must have a valid Pennsylvania hunting license and follow
the regulations that govern this rugged sport of brush-busting and
mountain-scampering. Wherever
you hunt grouse, there is ample reason to carve out some time afield this
season. Just be sure to take time to locate high-quality coverts that provide a
good mix of food and cover.
“Losses of young forest habitat over the
last several decades have been bad news for grouse, woodcock and other species
that rely on these habitats,” said Ian Gregg, Game Commission Game Bird Section
supervisor. “Our forests are getting older, and that’s a negative for grouse.
But, the good news is that the Game
Commission is taking an active approach to improving the situation for grouse
and other species that rely on young forests.
We have Grouse and Woodcock management plans that call for aggressive
management of young forest habitats, and Game Commission staff in all regions
are actively working to create suitable habitat – not only on State Game Lands,
but on cooperating State Forests and other public and private lands. This work
benefits multiple species and our efforts have received an overwhelmingly
positive response from the public and from our conservation partners.”
Pennsylvania’s
state bird is holding its own in areas of suitable habitat, and in some areas,
thriving. Statewide, the Game Commission’s 314
active Grouse Cooperators hunted 7,787 hours and recorded 10,249 flushes for an
average rate of 1.32 flushes per hour during the 2011-2012 grouse season. This
2011-2012 flush rate was equal to that of the previous season but six percent
below the long term (46-year) average of 1.41 flushes per hour. Embedded in those statewide averages,
however, are memorable hunting experiences, with many hunters recording four to
five flushes per hour in areas of good food and
cover.
Williams noted that Pennsylvania
consistently maintains the highest flush rates among nearby states such as
Kentucky, Maryland, New York, New Jersey, Ohio, West Virginia and
Virginia.
“Grouse flush trends in most
of our neighboring states show a continuing long term decline,” Williams said.
“Over the past six to seven years, Pennsylvania flush rates have exceeded those
of all neighboring states. During that time, our grouse population index has
stabilized in some regions that were previously declining, and even increased in
some portions of the Commonwealth. Anecdotal reports from grouse hunters as well
as agency land managers and foresters suggest that forest understory conditions
have improved for grouse as deer numbers were brought back into balance with
their forest habitats. I intend to
further investigate this link between deer impacts, forest habitat quality and
grouse numbers.”
Grouse hunting remains a
popular fall pursuit in Pennsylvania. According to the agency’s Game Take
Survey, an estimated 80,000 hunters took 52,000 grouse during the 2011-12
seasons, during 350,000 days afield. Though fewer than in the past, grouse
hunters remain passionate about their quarry, and the ruffed grouse remains a
popular game bird in the Commonwealth. Yet grouse hunter numbers remain well
below those of the mid-1980s when Pennsylvania had more than 400,000 hunters
pursuing the thunderbird.
“Several hunters have
told me they can hunt all day and not see another grouse hunter,” says Williams.
“For hunters seeking a season with a little more elbow room yet plenty of
challenge, you might want to consider grouse hunting.”
The Game Commission conducts a Summer
Sighting Survey in which Game Commission foresters and surveyors record numbers
of broods and individual grouse seen while working in the woods during June,
July and August. Trends in hunters’ fall flush rates follow those of the summer
survey about 80 percent of the time, so this information is used to develop the
season forecast.
“Sightings of adult grouse during the summer
of 2012 were down roughly 40 percent and brood sightings were down 25 percent
compared to last year,” Williams said. “Looking a bit further back over time,
observations of both adults and broods this summer are down 25 percent from the
most recent 10- year averages. So in spite of what I believe was a good year for
reproduction, I’m forecasting an average to slightly below-average grouse season
in 2012-13. This makes it particularly important to understand the
characteristics of good grouse habitat, locate high-quality coverts, and focus
your efforts there.”
Grouse and woodcock hunters are
urged to participate in the Game Commission’s Grouse Cooperator Survey, which
enables the agency to monitor long-term changes in grouse populations in good
habitats. Hunters of all skill levels are welcome, no matter how many days they
are able to devote to grouse or woodcock hunting. For each day hunted,
participants are asked to record the county and number of hours hunted, and
number of grouse and woodcock flushed and bagged.
Hunters interested
in participating in the Cooperator Survey are asked to contact the Pennsylvania
Game Commission, Bureau of Wildlife Management by calling 717-787-5529, or
writing to: Pennsylvania Game Commission, ATTN: Grouse Cooperator Survey, 2001
Elmerton Ave., Harrisburg, PA 17110-9797. New Cooperators will receive a copy of
the annual newsletter provided to all survey participants and all forms needed
for the upcoming season.
“Though
cooperator information is presented as state or region averages, it is important
to remember that statewide trends do not apply equally throughout Pennsylvania,”
Williams emphasized. She groups Pennsylvania regions into three categories, as
far as grouse hunting prospects:
1) Northwest
and Northcentral: good to excellent. These regions are consistently the top two
in the state and have maintained grouse flush rates at or above their long-term
averages in recent years. The rate of timber harvest over the next few decades
in this part of Pennsylvania may put enough land into good grouse cover that the
“good old days” are just ahead. The six contiguous counties of Warren, Forest,
McKean, Potter, Elk, and Cameron typically have the highest flush rates in the
state and offer plenty of acreage in public and open-access private lands for
hunters looking for new coverts.
2) Southwest,
Southcentral and Northeast: fair. These regions maintain intermediate flush
rates and habitat conditions with somewhat less extensive overall forest cover
and lower rates of active forest management at a large landscape scale. From 2010-2011 to 2011-2012, flush rates
increased slightly or remained stable in each of these regions.
3) Southeast:
fair in areas north of the Blue Mountain and poor south of it. Large parcels of
forest habitat in southeastern Pennsylvania were already scarce and this region
has lost early successional habitat even more rapidly than the rest of the
state. Consequently, grouse hunting opportunities in the agricultural and
urban-dominated landscapes south of the Blue Mountain are extremely limited.
Again, locating high-quality habitat is key and taking the time to scout for
grouse food and cover hotspots prior to the season may pay
dividends.
Grouse hunters are
reminded to wear at least 250 square inches of fluorescent orange clothing on
the head, chest and back combined at all times; limit hunting parties to no more
than six individuals; and plug shotguns to three-shell capacity (magazine and
chamber combined).
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