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Author Topic: Bear hunters 46% success  (Read 1899 times)

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Offline Lee Borgersen

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   :Hunter:  Bear hunters in quota areas hit 46% success rate

10/6/19


:fudd:   Overall Minnesota bear harvest up nearly 30% over 2018.

 

 :coffee: ......
Nearly half of all Minnesota bear hunters who had a permit in a quota area this year shot a bear, a success rate that may be unequaled anywhere in the U.S. or Canada. :bow:



 :popcorn: ....
In the quota permit areas, hunters took 1,565 bears through Oct. 1 out of 3,400 permits issued for a 46% success rate. That’s tied with the 2017 season for second highest success ever; the 2018 season was the highest success rate at 50%.

“There are few, if any, other places in North American where you can go out and have a 50/50 chance at a black bear,” said Andy Tri, a wildlife biologist with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources’ bear research team in Grand Rapids.

That compares to about a one-in-three hunters bagging a deer in Minnesota (one in five at bagging a buck) and about a one-in-three odds at bagging a wild turkey.

 :happy1: ...
“This is a positive thing. There are fewer permits, fewer hunters, fewer conflicts, and the quality of the hunt has gone way up, with higher success,” said Dan Stark, the DNR’s large carnivore specialist.





Including the non-quota bear area, nearly 6,800 hunters this year took 2,198 bears this season for a 32% overall success rate.

 :police: .....
The DNR estimates the total harvest this year could hit about 2,300 by the time the season ends on Oct. 13. By far the majority of bears are shot the first two weeks of the season, which started Sep. 1. Bear activity at hunter bait stations drops dramaticallyas the season wears on and wild foods become more available, especially acorns, hazelnuts and other mast.

In fact, it was a slight delay in this year’s acorn crop in many areas that may have been the biggest factor in the increased hunter success, Tri said. While acorns were still ripening on the trees, bears visited bait stations with abandon.

“That first week was especially good. A lot of bears were harvested before the acorns ripened,” Tri said. Historically, bear hunting success rates have ranged from 14% to 30%, he said.

Northland bear guides reported phenomenal success, including Udovich Guide Service near Orr where 14 hunters took 13 bear. :doofus:





While success rates remain off-the-charts high, the total number of bears shot in recent years is still way down from the 1990s and early 2000s, when the DNR was pressured by lawmakers and the public to kill more bears.

In 1995, 17,000 bear hunting permits were issued, and hunters shot 4,956 bears, still a record. Another 4,936 bears were shot as recently as 2001. The big increase in bear harvest reduced the number of bear complaints made to the DNR each year, from an averageof 3,000 per year in the 1990s to about 700 per year now.

But then DNR biologists saw the bear population drop too fast. The agency went from issuing 6,000 quota area permits as recently as 2012 to just 3,750 in 2013 and only 3,400 this year.

Using a complicated formula and data from harvested bears, the DNR estimated this year’s pre-hunt bear population between 10,000 and 13,000. But the modeling has a two-year delay, so the DNR tends to be conservative in its estimates.

Tri said this year’s harvest may again have been too high for the state’s bear population to sustain. That’s up 30% from 1,770 shot last year.





“We wouldn’t want to do that (2,300 bears harvested) every year. We couldn't sustain that,” Tri said.

The hunting season is by far the biggest impact on overall bear numbers. Nearly all bear mortality is human-caused — hunting, nuisance bars trapped and shot, and vehicle accidents account for nearly 90% of bear mortality.

“We have almost no bears that die of old age,” Tri said.

Stark said it’s too soon to say whether the 2,300 shot this year reflects more bears in the woods than the DNR estimated or if the increase just reflected food conditions that pushed more bears to hunter’s bait.

“We’ll work on that over the winter,” he said.

Quota permits and season details for the 2020 season will likely be available in April.
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Online mike89

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soooo how is it going Glenn????
a bad day of fishing is still better than a good day at work!!

Offline glenn57

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0 fer 2 so far. :doofus: :pouty: :pouty: going up Thursday this week for the last weekend. And let's say the weather doesn't look real promising. :angry2: :confused: :banghead: :banghead:
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Offline Gunner55

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That's what the 10 day for Squaw Lake has too, glenn. Decent yet Thursday but that's the best chance of precip, ~ 50% for Friday & Saturday but cooler. Snow mentioned on Saturday & Sunday. :thumbs: :pouty:
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Offline deadeye

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Talk about twisting numbers to make it look like a good thing.  "


     "Bear hunters in quota areas hit 46% success rate. Nearly half of all Minnesota bear hunters who had a permit in a quota area this year shot a bear, a success rate that may be unequaled anywhere in the U.S. or Canada." 
“There are few, if any, other places in North American where you can go out and have a 50/50 chance at a black bear,” said Andy Tri, a wildlife biologist with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources’ bear research team in Grand Rapids.

No kidding, if they gave out less permits they could raise the success rate to 100%.  What about the 80% of the bear hunters who applied and didn't get a permit? 



 
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Offline glenn57

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Well the bear won! :pouty: :pouty: went out Thursday night, got my azz soaking wet. Friday night was so blasted windy it was dangerous in the woods. Bailed at 5:30. Sat morning woke to 4 inches is snow so I said screw it. Pulled stands, then checked deer stands. Pulled pump and drank  :toast: got home about 1:30 today.
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Offline Boar

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owell, thers always nex time buddy
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Online mike89

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a bad day of fishing is still better than a good day at work!!