Seven of the 15 Canada goose populations surveyed had positive increases from 2017. Rohwer said on Delta Waterfowl’s website This year, the count is average and in some cases, well-below average. The pond count has been above, in some cases way above, the long-term average for many years, and we’ve enjoyed huge duck estimates as a result. The total waterfowl May pond estimate (encompassing Prairie and Parkland Canada and the north-central U.S.) was 5,227,000 +/- 0.2 million, 14% below the 2017 estimate of 6,096,000 +/- 0.2 million but corresponding to the LTA of 5,236,000 +/- 0.03 million. and Lephodytes cucullatus) and wood ducks (Aix sponsa). And populations for eight of the 10 duck species were above LTAs.Įstimates don’t include scoters(Melanitta spp.), eiders (Somateria spp., and Polysticta spp.), long-tailed ducks (Clangula hymenalis), mergansers ([Mergus spp. Frank Rohwer, president and chief scientist of Delta WaterfowlĪlthough down from 2017, this year’s duck numbers were 17% higher than the long-term average (LTA) from surveys conducted 1955 to 2017.
Fortunately, we continue to benefit from ‘carryover birds’ hatched during highly productive springs over the past several years. Ducks declined due to dry conditions in large portions of the breeding grounds. The breeding population decreased, but remains quite strong, with most species remaining near or above long-term averages. The total duck population estimate for 2018 was 41.2 +/- 0.7 million birds, a 13% decreaseįrom 2017’s estimate of 43.7 +/- 0.8 million birds. This cooperative effort between USFWS and the Canadian Wildlife Service includes the most recent North American waterfowl breeding population estimates.* Fish & Wildlife Service released its Waterfowl Population Status, 2018 report August 21. Duck numbers drop but remain above average