Recent

Check Out Our Forum Tab!

Click On The "Forum" Tab Under The Logo For More Content!
If you are using your phone, click on the menu, then select forum. Make sure you refresh the page!
The views of the poster, may not be the views of the website of "Minnesota Outdoorsman" therefore we are not liable for what our members post, they are solely responsible for what they post. They agreed to a user agreement when signing up to MNO.

Author Topic: Moose decline in n/w Minn  (Read 1749 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Lee Borgersen

  • AKA "Smallmouthguide"
  • Pro-Staff
  • Master Outdoorsman
  • *
  • Posts: 15328
  • Karma: +40/-562
  • 2008-2011-2018-2019 2020 Fish Challenge Champ!
    • Lee's Lake Geneva Guide Service
  The decline of moose in northwestern Minnesota

Article By: BLANE KLEMEK

7/23/18

 :coffee: ...
The city of Karlstad, Minn., about 35 miles south of Manitoba in the northwestern-most county of the state, Kittson County, once hailed itself as “The Moose Capital of the North.”

Maybe the town’s residents still make this claim, I’m not sure, but moose are essentially gone from the landscape these days. :confused:

 :reporter; ....
This autumn will mark the 18th season of owning 80 acres of hunting land a few miles north of Karlstad. During the first three years of ownership, 2001-03, I observed plenty of moose and their signs. It was common to encounter their large hoof prints left deep in marsh soils, or marvel at the sheer sizes of their beds in sedge meadows, or gasp at the antler rubs on 10-inch diameter aspen trees, or delight in the guttural calls of amorous bulls. Better yet, to see a moose was a sight to behold. Ungainly as they outwardly appear, a moose moves effortlessly with an aura of nobility and sure footedness.

But that was then. I haven’t seen a single moose over the past several years, :banghead: though I still occasionally come across tracks. Moose in northwest Minnesota, in the heart of what is still thought of as moose country, have nearly vanished. Particularly telling was a discovery I made a few falls ago while hunting deer. I found a bleached-white skull of a cow moose lying on the forest floor. No other skeletal remains could be located nearby.

When unremarkable little flowers, or butterflies, or tiny fish disappear, not many people notice. Yet when an animal the size of a small car seemingly drops off the face of the earth, everyone notices. :scratch: And most everyone wonders why. :confused: Theories abound, of course, for what has caused the disappearance of this incredible species, but it’s hard to determine, let alone accept; especially, regarding the latter, for those who remember the 1980s.

A population survey conducted then revealed a thriving population that numbered over 4,000 animals in Minnesota’s northwest. More recent surveys while DNR biologists survey elk uncovered less than 100 moose. Factors that appear to be contributing to the population decline include rising temperatures, infestations of parasites, lack of certain minerals in their diet, diseases, predators, and infertility of both cows and bulls caused by unknown reasons. Some people have suggested over hunting, while others believe surviving moose have migrated to more suitable habitats.

Whatever the reasons for the moose’s demise, one glaring fact is undeniably clear: the moose population of Minnesota’s great northwest is significantly diminished. And while a handful of holdouts are hanging on, and unless something extraordinary happens to change the apparent downward population trend, some wildlife biologists have predicted that moose will eventually become extinct in that part of Minnesota.

Unfortunate as this is, it is not the first time a species has disappeared. After all, woodland
caribou once ranged across northern Minnesota too. But sometimes the vacancy and niche left behind by one species is claimed by another species. Perhaps, one could argue, this is occurring right this minute in parts of northwestern Minnesota.

A few years ago while my  :fudd: partners and I sat around a warm fire at our Kittson County Deer Camp talking about how we formerly observed moose, I suggested that another, equally majestic, ungulate might be on the verge of filling the void left behind by moose. I reasoned that if any species of cervid was suited for the Aspen Parklands of northwest Minnesota it is elk.

The elk herds in northwestern Minnesota appear to be doing fairly well with the exception of the Grygla area elk herd that number only 15. Meanwhile, elk in the Lancaster area were counted last March at 75 animals. The fourth herd, which is a herd that travels across the international border into Manitoba, was estimated at around 133 animals combined with the elk counted by Canadian biologists in Manitoba.

 :popcorn: ...
Elk are native to Minnesota and evolved as an open landscape species of deer. They thrive wherever there is grass and aspen trees, but will also do equally well in mountain ranges where grass, sagebrush, and aspen and pine also exist. Indeed, elk are a species that one could accurately call a generalist. They can survive in almost any environment if given the chance and if the habitat provides adequate food, water, shelter and space.

Though Minnesota’s northwest moose population has, for the moment anyway, seen better days, a related large species of deer that’s actually more adapted to grassland habitats than moose are, looks to be expanding their presence in the northwest. It could be that elk might, in the end, replace moose as the premiere megafauna deer in northwestern Minnesota as we get out and enjoy the great outdoors.

A bull moose was spotted in Lake Bemidji in September 2017.
 :scratch: Our.... was dat just Glenn since he put all dat weight on!
  :rotflmao:

   :Photography:

[attachment deleted by admin]
« Last Edit: July 07/25/18, 06:24:21 AM by Lee Borgersen »
Proud Member of the CWCS.
http://www.cwcs.org

Member of Walleyes For Tomorrow.
www.walleyesfortomorrow.org

              Many BWCA Reports
http://leeslakegenevaguideservice.com/boundry_%2712.htm

If you help someone when they're in trouble, they will remember you when they're in trouble again

Offline LPS

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 24047
  • Karma: +70/-14

Online Leech~~

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 3263
  • Karma: +25/-133
  The decline of moose in northwestern Minnesota

Article By: BLANE KLEMEK

7/23/18

 

 :reporter; ....

A population survey conducted then revealed a thriving population that numbered over 4,000 animals in Minnesota’s northwest. More recent surveys while DNR biologists survey elk uncovered less than 100 moose. Factors that appear to be contributing to the population decline include rising temperatures, infestations of parasites, lack of certain minerals in their diet, diseases, predators, and infertility of both cows and bulls caused by unknown reasons. Some people have suggested over hunting, while others believe surviving moose have migrated to more suitable habitats.

A bull moose was spotted in Lake Bemidji in September 2017.
 :scratch: Our.... was dat just Glenn since he put all dat weight on!
  :rotflmao:

   :Photography:



Chart from MN DNR.  Click on it to see it better.  :moose105: :thumbs:

[attachment deleted by admin]
« Last Edit: July 07/25/18, 09:31:21 PM by Leech~~ »
Cooking over a open fire is all fun and games until someone losses a wiener!

Online glenn57

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 45214
  • Karma: +207/-191
  • 2015 deer contest champ!!!
  The decline of moose in northwestern Minnesota

Article By: BLANE KLEMEK

7/23/18

 :coffee: ...
The city of Karlstad, Minn., about 35 miles south of Manitoba in the northwestern-most county of the state, Kittson County, once hailed itself as “The Moose Capital of the North.”

Maybe the town’s residents still make this claim, I’m not sure, but moose are essentially gone from the landscape these days. :confused:

 :reporter; ....
This autumn will mark the 18th season of owning 80 acres of hunting land a few miles north of Karlstad. During the first three years of ownership, 2001-03, I observed plenty of moose and their signs. It was common to encounter their large hoof prints left deep in marsh soils, or marvel at the sheer sizes of their beds in sedge meadows, or gasp at the antler rubs on 10-inch diameter aspen trees, or delight in the guttural calls of amorous bulls. Better yet, to see a moose was a sight to behold. Ungainly as they outwardly appear, a moose moves effortlessly with an aura of nobility and sure footedness.

But that was then. I haven’t seen a single moose over the past several years, :banghead: though I still occasionally come across tracks. Moose in northwest Minnesota, in the heart of what is still thought of as moose country, have nearly vanished. Particularly telling was a discovery I made a few falls ago while hunting deer. I found a bleached-white skull of a cow moose lying on the forest floor. No other skeletal remains could be located nearby.

When unremarkable little flowers, or butterflies, or tiny fish disappear, not many people notice. Yet when an animal the size of a small car seemingly drops off the face of the earth, everyone notices. :scratch: And most everyone wonders why. :confused: Theories abound, of course, for what has caused the disappearance of this incredible species, but it’s hard to determine, let alone accept; especially, regarding the latter, for those who remember the 1980s.

A population survey conducted then revealed a thriving population that numbered over 4,000 animals in Minnesota’s northwest. More recent surveys while DNR biologists survey elk uncovered less than 100 moose. Factors that appear to be contributing to the population decline include rising temperatures, infestations of parasites, lack of certain minerals in their diet, diseases, predators, and infertility of both cows and bulls caused by unknown reasons. Some people have suggested over hunting, while others believe surviving moose have migrated to more suitable habitats.

Whatever the reasons for the moose’s demise, one glaring fact is undeniably clear: the moose population of Minnesota’s great northwest is significantly diminished. And while a handful of holdouts are hanging on, and unless something extraordinary happens to change the apparent downward population trend, some wildlife biologists have predicted that moose will eventually become extinct in that part of Minnesota.

Unfortunate as this is, it is not the first time a species has disappeared. After all, woodland
caribou once ranged across northern Minnesota too. But sometimes the vacancy and niche left behind by one species is claimed by another species. Perhaps, one could argue, this is occurring right this minute in parts of northwestern Minnesota.

A few years ago while my  :fudd: partners and I sat around a warm fire at our Kittson County Deer Camp talking about how we formerly observed moose, I suggested that another, equally majestic, ungulate might be on the verge of filling the void left behind by moose. I reasoned that if any species of cervid was suited for the Aspen Parklands of northwest Minnesota it is elk.

The elk herds in northwestern Minnesota appear to be doing fairly well with the exception of the Grygla area elk herd that number only 15. Meanwhile, elk in the Lancaster area were counted last March at 75 animals. The fourth herd, which is a herd that travels across the international border into Manitoba, was estimated at around 133 animals combined with the elk counted by Canadian biologists in Manitoba.

 :popcorn: ...
Elk are native to Minnesota and evolved as an open landscape species of deer. They thrive wherever there is grass and aspen trees, but will also do equally well in mountain ranges where grass, sagebrush, and aspen and pine also exist. Indeed, elk are a species that one could accurately call a generalist. They can survive in almost any environment if given the chance and if the habitat provides adequate food, water, shelter and space.

Though Minnesota’s northwest moose population has, for the moment anyway, seen better days, a related large species of deer that’s actually more adapted to grassland habitats than moose are, looks to be expanding their presence in the northwest. It could be that elk might, in the end, replace moose as the premiere megafauna deer in northwestern Minnesota as we get out and enjoy the great outdoors.

A bull moose was spotted in Lake Bemidji in September 2017.
 :scratch: Our.... was dat just Glenn since he put all dat weight on!
  :rotflmao:

   :Photography:
:tut: :tut: :tut: :tut:
2015 deer slayer!!!!!!!!!!

Offline K.O.W.

  • Xtreme Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 126
  • Karma: +2/-2
Why the elk can't handle Grygla as well could it be they're that much closer to thicker wolves ???? If they claim the last 10 years have been the 10 warmest years on record along with infertile forests etc over population of people etc etc it's just not the perfect time and environment like the 80's were when you could count on winter being winter. We played outdoor hockey then yearly, today our rink would melt off and on through many winters anymore and could never support all of our towns teams no chance indoor is mandatory now. Sorry Bagley.