Sections

Weather Forecast

Close
Advertisement

Officials consider consolidating turkey hunting permit areas

Turkey hunters are being asked to provide input on the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources' proposal to consolidate the state's 77 spring turkey permit areas into nine larger areas.

Advertisement

"Our turkey populations are doing exceptionally well and we no longer have a need to manage turkey on such a small scale," said Bill Penning, farmland wildlife program leader. "These changes will provide flexibility and opportunity to hunters."

The changes will allow increased hunting access afforded by larger permit areas and will greatly simplify administration and population management. Permit numbers available to hunters are not affected by this proposal. The number of permits available in the new larger permit areas will essentially be the sum of all the permits from the original, smaller permit areas.

The Whitewater, Carlos Avery and Mille Lacs wildlife management areas would remain as separate turkey permit areas.

Hunter comments will be taken online only through Monday, Oct. 10. A map of the proposed turkey permit areas and a feedback form are available online. Additional comments can be emailed to wildlife.dnr @state.mn.us.

Public input will be reviewed and considered in October. A decision on the spring turkey season will be made in early November.

The wild turkey was extinct in Minnesota beginning about 1900 but reintroduction attempts beginning in 1971 have been successful. Today the wild turkey population thrives throughout the non-boreal forest portion of the state.

During the growth years it was imperative to tightly regulate hunting on a small geographical basis to ensure that populations could rapidly expand into new areas. Today this level of regulation is no longer necessary, according to DNR officials.

Advertisement

Similar Articles

BEMIDJI — Bemidji State University’s Outdoor Program Center is offering sea kayaking and sailing skills clinics at the BSU boathouse at Diamond Point Park. June 26: Sea kayaking is suitable ...

For as often as I’ve heard the whip-poor-will’s delightfully incessant vocalization, I have only seen the actual bird once. It was many years ago while sharing a canoe with my ...

This June 3, 2013 photo released by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, shows a mother bear killed by a conservation officer. The DNR said the bear clawed and bit a 72-year-old Minnesota woman after she and her dog startled the bear and its three yearlings at her home Monday near McGregor, Minn. The officer later shot the bear when it charged him. The woman was recovering at home Wednesday. Officials left the yearlings alone to fend for themselves.(AP Photo/Department of Natural Resources)

This rock-crawling image courtesy of the River Wranglers is from the 2011 Dakota Territory Challenge. Submitted photo

Advertisement

More from around the web:

Advertisement