LITTLE
ROCK - Due to the high temperatures and low rainfall amounts, waterfowl
season for most Arkansans was a bust this year. Duck season is over, now
go hunt some snow geese - please.
Again this year, the special snow goose conservation season is open and
will extend through April 30. The format is the same for all states.
Overpopulation of snow geese is destroying their breeding grounds in the
far north of Canada, and their numbers need to be reduced. Hunting is
the chosen method of United States and Canadian authorities.
The target is what many people call "light geese" and the term includes
snow geese, blue geese and Ross's geese.
Andrew James, waterfowl program coordinator for the Arkansas Game and
Fish Commission, said, "Technically, this isn't a special hunting season
but a Conservation Order. The regulations are relaxed because it's
important that hunters be allowed to harvest as many snow geese as they
can. There's no daily bag or possession limit on light geese during the
Conservation Order, guns do not have to be plugged, electronic calls can
be used and shooting hours have been extended to a half hour before and
after sunset."
The requirements for hunting are a valid hunting license, either from
Arkansas or from the hunter's state of residence, and a special snow
goose registration number. The hunting licenses can be either resident
or non-resident. Hunters may get registration numbers, which are free,
by calling the AGFC at (800) 364-4263 between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday.
Snow
geese winter in Arkansas in large numbers, sometimes in flocks of
several hundred or even 1,000 or more birds. Agricultural lands of east
Arkansas are where most of them are found, but they may turn up in many
other areas of the state, AGFC officials said.
"This is a unique situation for waterfowl hunters," James said. "For
most species like mallards, Canada geese and pintails, the objective is
to limit the harvest to protect the species. With snow geese, the
objective is to maximize the harvest, and for exactly the same reason --
to protect the species and other species associated with Arctic tundra
habitat."
James said the special snow goose conservation season began several
years ago and continues this year in an effort to reduce the snow goose
population by half from the present levels. Snow goose numbers have
expanded more than 300 percent in the last three decades to a current
population of about six million.
"Snow geese survival rates have increased in
response to more favorable feeding conditions on the southern wintering
grounds and warmer than normal conditions on the breeding grounds ,"
James said. "They've increased to the point that they're damaging their
nesting habitat in the sub-Arctic and Arctic tundra salt marshes,
posing a serious threat to the long-term health of the Arctic ecosystem
and its associated wildlife communities. The Conservation Order with its
relaxed harvest regulations is an attempt to reduce the population to a
more healthy level by allowing hunters the opportunity to harvest more
geese." |