The Niagara Falls Review

Wild turkey hunt dodges virus bullet

U.S. states encouragin­g activity with focus on social-distancing rules

- PATRICK WHITTLE

FALMOUTH, MAINE—The coronaviru­s pandemic has cancelled dozens of spring traditions, from college basketball’s Final Four to Easter Sunday services, but there’s one rite that’s going on largely unfettered — turkey hunting.

Every state except Alaska, which is the only state with no turkeys, hosts a spring turkey hunt each year. The birds, whose domesticat­ed cousins grace Thanksgivi­ng tables from Hawaii to Maine, are among America’s greatest conservati­on success stories.

The hunt is taking on a new look in some parts of the country this year due to social-distancing laws. Many states, including Maine, are requiring out-of-state residents to selfquaran­tine for two weeks when they enter the state. That functional­ly eliminates out-of-state hunters from coming to the Pine Tree State to bag a bird.

Other states, including Kansas, have suspended the sale of turkey permits to non-residents to reduce spread of the coronaviru­s. Some have suspended the need to register a bird after shooting it.

But all 49 states are going ahead with turkey hunts in some form or another, said Mark Hatfield, national director of conservati­on services for the South Carolina-based National Wild Turkey Federation. That even includes Hawaii, where the birds aren’t native, but were introduced in the 1960s.

In Maine, hunter Joel Pitcher said he expects a good season, though it won’t be as social an affair as it has been in the past.

“I’m not just going to go with a bunch of buddies, like I normally would ... Somebody might call and say, ‘Hey, what are you doing tomorrow? Hunting turkey?’ That’s not going to happen,” he said.

Turkey hunting takes place every spring in part to control the population of the birds, which once numbered in only the tens of thousands before repopulati­on efforts brought them back. The population rose to 1.3 million in the early 1970s and is now more than six million, Hatfield said.

The turkeys have become so successful that, in some parts of the country, they’re overpopula­ted and can cause nuisances, such as the traffic disruption­s that sometimes emerge in suburban Boston when a flock of the birds decides to mill around in the road. A continued hunt is important to manage the population, Hatfield said.

The earliest hunts began in March and some last until June. Hatfield said it’s difficult to know how successful this year’s hunt will be, but with many hunters laid off or furloughed or simply working from home, they might have more opportunit­ies to participat­e in what is traditiona­lly a weekend activity. Early-season hunters seemed to be having a very successful year, he said.

“That person may say, ‘Well, I’m going to turkey hunt more. I used to be able to turkey hunt more on the weekend, now I can do it during the week.’ It could increase the harvest of resident hunters,” Hatfield said.

Two million turkey hunters bagged about 665,000 birds in spring 2014, the most recent year for which statistics are available, Hatfield said. The biggest harvests were in Pennsylvan­ia and Missouri, while Georgia and Texas also had large hauls, he said.

In Vermont, it appears that more hunters are taking part in the spring turkey hunting season this year than last year. In late April, 13 per cent more young hunters participat­ed in the annual youth turkey hunt, based on licence sales, and it appeared that 23 per cent more resident adult hunters bought turkey licences for the start of the spring season, which opened May 1, said Mark Scott, the director of wildlife for the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department.

 ?? ROBERT F. BUKATY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A wild turkey crosses a field in Freeport, Maine, on May 4. Turkey hunting takes place every spring across the United States in part to control the population of the birds.
ROBERT F. BUKATY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A wild turkey crosses a field in Freeport, Maine, on May 4. Turkey hunting takes place every spring across the United States in part to control the population of the birds.

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