Hunting News

Moose collaring underway in northern NH

Moose collaring underway in northern NH

By New Hampshire Fish and Game Department

Northern New Hampshire residents may see a helicopter overhead in the coming weeks as approximately 45 moose cows and calves are collared for the third year of a four-year study of moose mortality and productivity.

The Fish and Game Department has contracted with Native Range, Inc., to collar the moose. Activity will be weather-dependent, and expected to begin in early January.

During this time, residents of Success, Berlin, Milan, Cambridge, Dummer, Millsfield, Second College Grant, Wentworth’s Location and Errol may notice a low-flying helicopter. Residents with questions can call Fish and Game's Wildlife Division at (603)271-2461.

The collaring will take place in Wildlife Management Unit C2, the eastern side of WMUs B and C1, and southern A2.

The capture crew will use net-guns and tranquilizer darts to capture the moose so that they can be collared.  Blood and other samples collected during the collaring process will help evaluate the health of the moose.

Collared animals will be radio-tracked for four years and monitored for as long as the collars keep transmitting. One graduate student and several field technicians from the University of New Hampshire, which is partnering with Fish and Game in the study, will track the moose, recording how long the individual moose live, and when a moose dies, getting there as soon as possible to determine the cause of death.

Fish and Game Moose Project Leader Kristine Rines indicates the capture crew will be collaring moose in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont, as the three states work together to learn how moose density and weather interact to boost tick-caused moose mortality and reduce moose birth rates.

“In comparing mortality and productivity from the New Hampshire study conducted in 2001-2006, versus the work done to date in New Hampshire from 2014-2016, we know that ticks are causing increasingly negative impacts to adult cow productivity,” Rines said.

The study, funded by federal Wildlife Restoration dollars with the support of matching funds from the University of New Hampshire, may help answer a question on the mind of many Granite State residents and visitors: What's in store for New Hampshire moose?

"While regional moose populations are indeed facing some serious threats, moose are not on the verge of disappearing from the New Hampshire landscape, but they are declining," said Rines. Current moose densities in the New Hampshire study area range from 1.43-1.73 moose/square mile.

For more information on the study, click here.

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