3. "And, no, closing the season would do virtually nothing to help them rebound"
This is such a load of BS! Can someone explain to me how not shooting any birds one year will not help the population next year? Don't give me any of that "a rooster will push a hen out of cover" gargage either. When the birds are bunched up during the winter months, you don't find pockets of just rooster and just hens. They all live/feed together.
One rooster can breed 100 hens. We need much more than a few added roosters surviving for the population to rebound, and I don't think it lies in winter cover as the article states. Winter cover is vital, don't get me wrong, but there are so many other factors pushing the bird population into the crapper.
The concept of thermal cover for pheasants is widely misinterpreted in my opinion. Pheasants need more open habitat (open as in grasslands void of trees), with small winter cover pockets (cedars, etc.). Since the implementation of those earlier CRP contracts in the 80s/90s, most grasslands have continually gotten 'brushier'. Check out all the cedar trees in many of these old bromegrass fields. As our CRP gets brushier, populations of nest predators, coyotes, hawks, etc. has risen as well.
I'm afraid there is a pretty dreary outlook for our pheasants here in Iowa. We got blasted with the worst weather possible these past few years, and the populations will rebound some if we get better weather in the next few, but in my opinion, the dynamics in many of the ecosystems out there are unsuited for pheasants anymore, and that is not going to change without MAJOR changes in habitat and a huge reduction in predators.
A friend of mine brought up a big point the other day as well:
* Is there ANYONE doing a true study to get to the bottom of the pheasant decline, or is it all educated hearsay? Is the DNR really delving into this issue? SOMETHING is doing far more damage to these birds than just bad weather. It is a combination of things obviously, but what are we missing? How about the changes in herbicide usage, and its affects on the birds/insects they eat, etc.? How about the genetically modified crops... are they digested/processed the same as the old corn, etc.?
Some things to ponder ...![]()
I agree there is a lack of habitat, but closing the season for one year HAS to help the population! It's common sense, a rooster has a much better chance of surviving if he's not shot!
the problem with pheasants in iowa is loss of HABITAT
with high corn prices, and high land prices, there aren't any acres being left in out of production. grass waterways are being plowed up. fencelines are being taken out, so they can squeeze in a few extra rows, brushy waterways are being bulldozed.
all these "great" ideas people are throwing around (closing the season for a year, stocking birds, etc...) will do NOTHING when there is no cover and no food being left behind for birds. PHEASANT SEASON IN IOWA IS DEAD!! and it isn't coming back. the only thing that will bring back birds, is some sort of farm crisis, where CRP is more viable than planting crop.
PERIOD.
the hard winters and wet springs definately hammer the birds. one or 2 good nesting seasons will turn things around where there is decent habitat left
the problem with pheasants in iowa is loss of HABITAT
with high corn prices, and high land prices, there aren't any acres being left in out of production. grass waterways are being plowed up. fencelines are being taken out, so they can squeeze in a few extra rows, brushy waterways are being bulldozed.
all these "great" ideas people are throwing around (closing the season for a year, stocking birds, etc...) will do NOTHING when there is no cover and no food being left behind for birds. PHEASANT SEASON IN IOWA IS DEAD!! and it isn't coming back. the only thing that will bring back birds, is some sort of farm crisis, where CRP is more viable than planting crop.
PERIOD.
iowaqdm said:Exactly. Another thing that I have been seeing in the last 5 years is that more farmers going back to fall tillage practices vs no-till practices which leaves vertially no spilled grain exposed for pheasants and wildlife throughout the winter. So as Teeroy pointed out, no cover and no food equals no birds. Add a couple wet springs and heavy snow winters and you have the recipe for drastic population declines. I agree with Teeroy that the population wont be coming back anytime soon without the habitat being replaced in large quantities across the State via CRP programs. THA4 is exactly right in that closing the season will do nothing to increase the population. Closing the season will only guarantee that fewer hunting licenses will be sold and thus less revenue for the DNR. Studies have also shown that once people stop hunting many never return to the sport. So it would not be wise to close the season from a population standpoint, revenue standpoint or hunter participation standpoint.
We just had a PF meeting today. Our regional biologist was there and all the topics brought up here were discussed. Habitat is obviously the most important factor. Pheasants rarely starve in bad winters but do die of exposure to wind and snow or ice. Recruitment through successful nesting is next, since pheasants don't have a long lifespan in the best of conditions. Predators take their share, but that is also related to dwindling habitat. If you are a hawk, you sit over the cover where the birds are. Less cover, more concentration of birds, easier hunting. Same with yotes. Same with egg robbers, that's why large blocks of nesting cover produce better nesting than narrow strips of cover. The birds can spread out and odds of finding any one nest lower. PF and the DNR are aware that in many areas, even with good cover, the number of birds available to repopulate is getting dangerously low. Answers to this are few and expensive. stocking birds from game farms has been proven to be non-effective in test after test after test by PF and DNRs everywhere. The only way is trap and release of wild birds from another area and that costs a LOT of money. That's the way it is. Good nesting seasons are about our only hope.