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Think Like a
Duck
The biological needs of ducks change as the seasons progress. Heres how to
adapt your hunting strategies to match these shifts in the birds behavior
By Matt Young
Migratory waterfowl are among the most fascinating and complex
creatures in the natural world. While some other game birds may be warier or
live in more inhospitable terrain, few, if any, are as transient and
unpredictable as ducks and geese. Just when waterfowl appear to have settled
into reliable patterns of activity, hunting pressure or weather changes will
cause them to alter their feeding and roosting habits. In other cases, great
numbers of ducks can suddenly appear or vanish overnight following a strong
cold front or heavy rains. In reality, unraveling the mysteries of duck
behavior is a never- ending quest for waterfowlers, which, of course, is what
makes the sport so challenging and rewarding.
Waterfowl biologists also dedicate their lives to understanding
waterfowl and their habitats, except they are guided in their efforts by
science rather than relying solely upon personal experience. Having completed
years of rigorous study and training at universities and in the field, they
know, as well as anyone, the many complex behaviors exhibited by waterfowl
throughout the year. Of particular relevance to hunters are behavioral changes
occuring among ducks during the fall and winter that influence where the birds
go, what they eat, and how they interact with other waterfowl. To learn more
about these biological events and how they relate to hunting, Ducks Unlimited
interviewed several accomplished waterfowl biologists. Incidentally, all of
these duck experts are diehard waterfowlers themselves, making their insights
particularly valuable to hunters.
EARLY FALL (SEPTEMBER 1 - OCTOBER 15)
By late August and early September, many ducks vacate smaller wetlands used
during the breeding season and congregate with other waterfowl on larger
marshes and lakes. During this fall staging period, individual birds organize
with others of their own species into larger flocks in preparation for
migration to their wintering grounds.
Some of the finest waterfowling of the year is available in early
fall on major waterfowl staging areas across North America. Randy Renner,
manager of conservation programs at DUs Great Plains Regional Office in
Bismarck, North Dakota, says waterfowl stage in greatest numbers on wetlands in
areas with an abundance of preferred foods. Waterfowl have to consume large
quantities of food in early fall to replace nutrients depleted during the
summer molt and to acquire fat reserves for fall migration. Just like athletes
preparing for a big game, ducks load up on carbohydrate-rich foods to provide
them with the energy they will need to migrate long distances. Across the prairies,
many mallards and pintails seek out wetlands in intensively cultivated regions,
where they have greater access to high-energy crops, such as barley, peas,
lentils, wheat, and corn. Other species like wigeon, teal, canvasbacks,
redheads, and scaup predominantly feed on submersed aquatic plants, seeds, or
invertebrates, so youll find concentrations of these ducks on staging wetlands
that are rich in these natural foods.
Another essential biological need of staging waterfowl is secure
wetland habitat where the birds can safely roost at night and comfortably loaf
and preen during the day. Dr. Scott Stephens, director of conservation planning
at DUs Great Plains office, spends long hours scouting for wetlands being used
by large numbers of ducks as day roosts. Im not sure why, but ducks will
visit certain wetlands during the day and then use other wetlands to roost at
night. They seem to use these habitats as staging areas before going on
foraging bouts in the fields and also as resting areas during the day.
Last season, I located a large concentration of mallards on a
wetland and waited there until sunset to make sure they werent roosting there
during the night. Sure enough, after sunset every bird picked up off the
wetland, flew about a mile, and spiraled into another wetland to roost.
The next morning, when we returned to the first wetland before
dawn, we didnt flush a single duck, Stephens continues, but as soon as
shooting light arrived, a steady stream of birds started coming back from the
night roost. They were so intent on using our wetland that we hardly had time
to pick up our birds before another flock would set up downwind of the decoys.
One of the biggest advantages about hunting these areas is that ducks use them
throughout the day, whereas birds often only use night roosts before and after
shooting hours.
According to Stephens, ducks often use different types of wetlands
during the day versus at night. Mallards and pintails frequently use fairly
open wetlands with little emergent vegetation as day roosts, perhaps because
they can see potential predators better. In contrast, night roosts are
generally wetlands with more emergent vegetation, such as bulrushes or
cattails, where ducks can tuck themselves away in pockets of thick cover.
Stephens says day roosts can provide productive hunting throughout
the fall as new ducks arrive from the north. These places will often fill up
with new ducks when a major migration is happening. It pays to check them for
new arrivals before and after major frontal passages.
MID TO LATE FALL (OCTOBER 16 - DECEMBER 15)
The middle of October is a time of transition for waterfowl. The first major
snowstorms and Arctic blasts of the year begin to plunge across the Canadian
border, and rapidly declining day lengths and progressively colder weather
trigger the migration of waterfowl from the breeding grounds. Waterfowlers in
mid-latitude states live for this time of year, when every major cold front can
bring new flights and hot shooting.
Mike Checkett, a Missouri native and regional biologist at DU
national headquarters in Memphis, says most waterfowl migrate primarily in
response to food availability. Ducks that feed largely on aquatic vegetation,
seeds, and other natural plant foods found in shallow-water areas, including
green-winged teal, gadwalls, wigeon, and wood ducks, are typically the first to
migrate, because they can quickly lose access to their food supplies during a
sudden freeze. The food resources used by migrating mallards, black ducks,
scaup, and other divers, which feed on waste grain in dry fields or on mollusks
and crustaceans in deep, open lakes, are less vulnerable to cold weather. These
birds dont have to migrate until deep snow covers the fields or frigid
temperatures freeze big- water areas.
For waterfowlers who hunt along migration corridors, timing is
everything. To be successful at mid-latitudes you have to be flexible enough
to drop everything and go when the weather is right, Checkett says. While I
was conducting my masters research on state waterfowl areas in north-central
Missouri, I noticed that new ducks would start to trickle in a day or two ahead
of major cold fronts, and even more birds would pile into management areas as
the front was blowing through. However, while the peak of the migration usually
occurred with the front, the best hunting occurred on clear, cold days
immediately after the front had passed.
Migrating waterfowl take full advantage of tail winds, Checkett
continues, and many of the birds will ride them as far as they can until the
wind shifts. On north-wind days, youll often see a lot of ducks moving south,
but many of them keep on going. From my personal experience, the best time to
hunt is following a frontal passage, when the wind has just started to shift
from north to the south. Migrating flocks know its time to stop when they hit
a headwind or the wind subsides.
At such times, Checkett recommends that waterfowlers use large
decoy spreads and aggressive calling to draw in passing flocks. Nearly all
migratory birds use flocking as an adaptive strategy. When ducks first arrive
in an area, they are often drawn to large wetlands in search of concentrations
of other ducks that signify safety and the availability of food. New ducks
respond to calling for the same reasons. Its no coincidence there is a strong
duck-calling tradition in places like central Illinois, where great numbers of
migrating waterfowl pass through each fall.
WINTER (DECEMBER 16 - JANUARY 30)
By the middle of December, most waterfowl have reached their wintering grounds
across the southern tier of the United States and Mexico. Now, the most
important biological need of wintering ducks, next to food and general
survival, is selecting a mate. Although the timing varies by species, courtship
activity generally increases throughout winter, and wintering waterfowl
congregate in areas with an abundance of foods that will provide them with the
energy they need to compete for mates.
The availability of waterfowl foods on many wintering areas is
often determined by how much rain is received during the season. Heavy rainfall
events can suddenly flood thousands of acres of productive new waterfowl
habitat in agricultural fields and river bottoms, and dabbling ducks flock to
these areas to exploit new food resources. During the early 1990s, Dr. Bobby
Cox, presently a waterfowl researcher with the U.S. Geological Survey,
conducted a landmark studysupported in part by Ducks Unlimitedof movements of
wintering pintails in southwest Louisiana. Cox and his colleagues marked nearly
350 hen pintails caught in October in a study area surrounding Lacassine
National Wildlife Refuge and tracked them by ground and air through the end of
February.
The researchers made some surprising discoveries. We learned
pintails that initially migrate to the Louisiana Gulf Coast often fly north
into the Mississippi Alluvial Valley (MAV) of north Louisiana and Arkansas to
meet approaching cold fronts and associated low pressure cells, Cox says.
This reverse migration appears to be triggered by a sharp drop in barometric
pressure. This is likely a cue because, on average, its at such times that the
MAV receives heavy rains. Another study conducted in the Central Valley of
California produced similar results. This behavior doesnt appear to be unique
to this area or to pintails. All dabbling ducks are constantly in search of
newly flooded habitat because that is where food availability is highest.
In most cases, Coxs marked pintails migrated north on a strong
south wind flowing up from the Gulf toward approaching fronts. However, in some
cases, the birds actually bucked a north wind. A lot of hunters wait for ducks
to come down from the north on cold fronts, when in reality, depending on their
location, they might actually receive more ducks from the south.
Food availability isnt the only factor that influences habitat
selection by wintering waterfowl. Chad Manlove, manager of conservation
programs at DUs Southern Regional Office in Jackson, Mississippi, explains,
Ducks become more secretive while selecting mates. They seek out wetlands with
heavy cover, such as flooded buckbrush, timber, and emergent vegetation, where
they can break up into small groups and conduct courtship displays. Once pair
bonds are formed, ducks become even more reclusive. Pairs will often go out to
feed with other ducks at dawn and dusk, but during the day, they look for
places where they can isolate themselves, so the male doesnt have to expend
energy protecting the hen from the advances of other males. Of course, wetlands
with heavy cover also provide waterfowl with good thermal cover, which is
another means by which the birds conserve energy.
Waterfowl have few natural predators on their wintering grounds,
and by late December and January, hunting is the principal cause of mortality
for many duck species. Not surprisingly, hunting has a large impact on habitat
selection among wintering waterfowl. Pintails, in particular, appear to modify
their feeding and roosting habits in response to hunting pressure. Cox recalls,
The Saturday before opening day in southwest Louisiana, which is the day most
hunters in the region go out and work on their blinds, we started to see an
increase in the number of pintails using Lacassine refuge during the day, and a
lot of those birds also began to feed nocturnally. Once the season opened, we
saw a big spike in the number of birds using the refuge during the day and then
feeding at night in rice fields off the refuge. During the split, when the hunting
season was temporarily closed, diurnal use of the refuge dropped from roughly
60 percent of the marked birds to about 40 percent. However, as soon as the
hunting season reopened, the birds quickly adjusted their schedules and again
started using the refuge in higher numbers.
The lesson for duck hunters, according to Cox, is to manage
hunting pressure wisely on wetlands and fields. If you hunt any given area too
much, in the long run you are going to have less success than if you hunt that
area less frequently. Its hard for many hunters to grasp the concept that you
will actually bag more birds by hunting fewer days.
Manlove, who hunts largely on public lands in the Mississippi
Delta, scouts extensively during the off-season to find remote sloughs and
beaver swamps with limited access. Now more than ever, hunting pressure is
going to dictate success. Ducks are already looking for seclusion in winter to
conduct pair-bonding activities, and hunting only magnifies this tendency.
Today, ducks often wont use areas that are hunted more than once or twice a
week. To find these places on public land, you have to be willing to walk a
long way or ride for a long time in a boat to go where other hunters either
dont know about or are unwilling to go. Ducks are going to find these places
and use them.
He adjusts his decoy spreads to match the behavior of ducks
throughout the season. As winter progresses and more and more birds have
selected mates, Ill cut back on the number of decoys in my spread. By January,
I use only six to 10 highly realistic decoys. I set them in pairs and as lone
males, simulating ducks that have either formed pair bonds or are conducting
courtship rituals. Also, motion in the decoys becomes critical late in the
season, especially while hunting in sloughs that have thick cover and are
sheltered from the wind. I use a jerk cord and kick water where I can to keep
the decoys moving in a lifelike manner.
Manlove also calls more sparingly later in winter. By the end of
December, hunting pressure has made many of the birds extremely call shy. When
ducks are working, Ill often only use a five-note greeting call and a few soft
quacks and some feeding chatter to the let them know Im there. Youll also see
a lot of lone drake mallards in the winter, and the lonesome hen calla series
of single quacks spaced a few seconds apartcan be absolutely deadly on these
unpaired greenheads. Other times, particularly on calm mornings, its best not
to call at all and simply let motion in the decoys do the work.
Waterfowl biologists clearly have a unique perspective on hunting,
derived from years of experience studying waterfowl in different environments.
Renner provides some parting wisdom, The key to success in any form of hunting
is to know your quarry. All waterfowlers should take the time to learn as much
about ducks and geese as they can. This will not only make you a more
successful hunter, but it will also give you a greater appreciation for how
these amazing birds interact with their environment.
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