RESULTS OF WINTER 2014 WILD TURKEY PUBLIC INTERNET FLOCK SURVEY

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RESULTS OF WINTER 2014 WILD TURKEY PUBLIC INTERNET FLOCK SURVEY For the sixth consecutive year, the Fish & Game Department conducted a wild turkey flock survey in which the public reported their flock sightings on-line. The reporting period was January 1 through March 31, 2014. During that time there were 1,520 flock reports, totaling 21,352 turkeys. In comparison, the winter 2013 flock survey recorded 1,787 flocks totaling 28,389 turkeys. This was a decrease of 267 flocks (14.9%) and 7,037 turkeys (24.8%) from the 2013 survey. Flock Reports and Turkey Numbers by WMUs and Towns The Wildlife Management Units (WMUs) with the most flock reports, as well as the most total turkeys seen was unit M with 371 reports and 5,460 turkeys. This is understandable since this unit has the highest density of people to report turkeys. It does not mean this unit has the most wild turkeys, but rather that numerous people may report the same group of turkeys. This is evident because many reports at the same or very similar sites. The 4 units from southeastern NH (units J2, K, L, M) resulted in a combined 1,004 flock reports, 66.1% of the statewide total of 1,520 (Table 1), far more than any other part of the state. The average number of turkeys in a flock statewide was 14.05. This survey often lacks reports from some of the large dairy farms in western NH which have 100 or more wintering turkeys. Table 2 records the towns from each county with the most flock reports from winter 2014. The same pattern occurs as with flock reports and total turkey numbers by WMU. Towns from southeastern NH (Hillsboro/Merrimack/Rockingham/Stafford counties) recorded the most flock reports. Towns and counties from western and northern NH have significantly lower numbers of flock reports. It was interesting to look at the towns around the state which reported the highest numbers of turkeys in a flock (Table 3). Only 15 towns had 50 or more turkeys in a flock. The greatest numbers in flocks were 83, 75, 75, 57, 54 and 53 turkeys. The flocks with the larger number of turkeys per flock were again from southeastern NH. Table 4 records the total flock reports and total turkeys from the six years of this public internet winter flock survey (2009 through 2014). The numbers have been fairly similar over the six survey winters. The 6-year averages were: 1,467 flock reports, 23,500 turkeys and 15.7 turkeys per flock. General Habitat Use Table 5 breaks down the flock reports where the turkeys were observed into three general categories: 221 flock reports (15.72%) were at farmland sites, 480 flock reports (34.14%) at woodland sites, and 705 flock reports (50.14%) at residential sites. Of WMUs with 30 or more total reports, units D2 (33.33%) and H1 (36.11%) had the highest percentage of farmland site reports. This was predictable because the best remaining dairy farm numbers are in these two units. It was somewhat surprising that units J1 (22.22%) and J2 (24.17%) in eastern NH had the next highest flock reports at farmland sites. There is no surprise about the percentage of flock reports at woodland sites over the 18 wildlife management units. NH is the 2 nd most forested state and most towns are 90% forested. The highest percentage of flock reports statewide was 705 at residential sites (50.14%). This was not surprising because this is where the greatest numbers of people reside and birdfeeders are found. As

expected the most total flock reports came from units J2, K, L, and M from southeastern NH, which are the most developed areas of the state. Unit M which is the most developed or residential, had 262 flock reports (75.0%). Winter Food Usage Table 6 records the statewide food usage categories by turkey flocks. As expected, by far the greatest percentage of use was 432 flocks reported (59.4%) at back yard birdfeeders. The second highest category was 135 flocks reported (18.6%) of turkeys using corn/grain put out by people. If these two categories are combined, the total becomes 78.0% of the flock observations, from turkeys getting birdseed and grain provided at people s houses. The next highest category of food usage is of 77 flocks (10.6%) using apples/crabapples, followed by 41 reports (5.6%) of acorn or beechnut use. If the use of corn in manure, corn in ensilage and standing corn are combined, this is a total of 26 flock reports or 3.5% corn usage from agriculture. There were another 181 flock reports which were recorded with the type of food usage listed as unknown. Table 7 compares the percentage use of birdfeeders for each wildlife management unit between the years 2013 and 2014. The number of flock reports was similar for both years 400 in 2013 and 432 in 2014. However, the percentage of flocks using birdfeeders was quite different each year, being 22.7% in 2013, and 47.6% average in 2014. The birdfeeder use was low during winter 2013 because snow cover was relatively low that winter where 7 different thaws created bare ground sites. For winter 2014 the most flock reports of birdfeeder use came from units J2, K, L and M in southeastern NH, with unit M with 123 reports (55.7%) being the highest. This is logical because this unit has the most houses and the most birdfeeders. Avian Pox Information The winter public internet flock survey is a good way to pick up observations and sites with avian pox turkeys because a maximum number of people are involved throughout the state. Table 8 records the sites at which flocks were reported which contained turkeys exhibiting avian pox, and includes the number of turkeys in the flock as well as the number exhibiting symptoms from each wildlife management unit. See http://www.wildlife.state.nh.us/wildlife/turkey-virus.html for additional information on avian pox. There were a total of 25 flock reports from the 18 wildlife management units. Several reports were from the same street or site, so that the total was reduced to 21 sites from 16 towns. Merrimack and Dover had 3 reports each. The majority of the reports came from towns in southeastern NH or units L and M. Only 2 reports were from northern NH and 3 from western NH. It was interesting to note that usually only 1 or 2 pox turkeys were observed in most flocks. The exceptions were 6 of 12 turkeys at a Deerfield site, 19 of 30 turkeys at a Kingston site, and another 7 of 15 turkeys at the same Kingston site. The 25 pox reports from 1,520 flock reports (1.64%) would indicate that the pox virus was not very prevalent in the statewide turkey population, at least during the winter months of year 2014.

Table 1. Numbers of flocks reported and numbers of turkeys by WMUs Winter 2014 WMU # of flocks Reported Total turkeys Max. # in a flock Avg. # turkeys Per flock A 8 123 35 15.38 B 4 39 18 9.75 C1 12 183 25 15.25 C2 9 98 25 10.89 D1 18 253 30 14.06 D2 34 433 30 12.74 E 23 159 25 6.91 F 28 267 32 9.54 G 70 1,010 42 14.43 H1 36 672 50 18.67 H2 72 970 40 13.47 I1 83 1,170 50 14.10 I2 57 640 50 11.23 J1 61 987 83 16.18 J2 264 3,671 57 13.91 K 151 2,098 44 13.89 L 218 3,101 75 14.22 M 371 5,460 75 14.72 TOTAL 1,520 21,352 83 max. 14.05 = avg. Table 2. Towns per county with most flock reports Winter 2014 Belknap Carroll Cheshire Coos Grafton Alton 20 Conway 11 Jaffrey 13 Whitefield 7 Hanover 13 Gilford 24 Wolfeboro 16 Marlboro 7 Lancaster 6 Enfield 11 Laconia 20 Bartlett 7 Rindge 7 Lebanon 9 Gilmanton 17 Tuftonboro 9 Swanzey 8 Lisbon 6 Wakefield 8 Plymouth 5 Effingham 11 Hillsboro Merrimack Rockingham Strafford Sullivan Amherst 20 Concord 28 Auburn 22 Dover 20 Cornish 12 Hudson 22 Epsom 16 Deerfield 21 Strafford 20 Washington 6 Merrimack 28 Franklin 14 Greenland 39 Barrington 15 Charlestown 5 Weare 20 Hooksett 12 Londonderry 34 Durham 17 Sunapee 5 Hollis 17 Loudon 12 Northwood 21 Farmington 15 Newbury 11 Portsmouth 19 Lee 17 Hill 12 Stratham 18 Rochester 16 Hopkinton 12 Nottingham 14 Barrington 15 Somersworth 15

Table 3. Flocks with the most turkeys reported by town and county Winter 2014 Belknap Carroll Cheshire Coos Grafton Alton 53 Conway 50 Rindge 40 Jefferson 25 Enfield 40 Gilmanton 50 Wakefield 83 Westmoreland 37 Lancaster 26 Hanover 42 Whitefield 30 Wentworth 40 Hillsboro Merrimack Rockingham Strafford Sullivan Hudson 40 Bradford 50 Candia 50 Durham 43 Cornish 50 New Ipswich 44 Chichester 57 Hampton Falls 50 Middleton 50 Unity 31 Peterboro 40 Concord 40 Kensington 75 Strafford 54 Dunbarton 40 N. Hampton 40 Epsom 75 Nottingham 45 Franklin 50 Plaistow 40 Hill 40 Rye 50 Hopkinton 40 S. Hampton 41 Northfield 40 Stratham 46 Pittsfield 48 Table 4. Number of winter flock reports and number of turkeys for 6 years. Year of survey # of flock Reports Total turkeys Max. # in a flock Avg. # turkeys Per flock 2009 1,528 23,922 100 15.66 2010 1,291 19,219 100 14.89 2011 1,497 27,521 150 18.38 2012 1,180 20,595 150 17.45 2013 1,787 28,389 150 15.89 2014 1,520 21,352 83 14.05 6 year avg. = 1,467 23,500 15.7

Table 5. General habitat use of turkey flocks by WMUs Winter 2014 Farmland Residential Woodland WMU # of reports % of total # of reports % of total # of reports % of total A 1 14.9% 4 57.14% 2 28.57% B 2 50.0% 1 25.00% 1 25.00% C1 1 9.09% 5 45.45% 5 45.45% C2 -- -- 2 28357% 5 71.43% D1 3 18.75% 9 56.25% 4 25.00% D2 10 33.33% 10 33.33% 10 33.33% E -- -- 11 50.00% 11 50.00% F 7 26.92% 8 30.77% 11 42.31% G 10 16.67% 26 43.33% 24 40.00% H1 13 36.11% 10 27.78% 13 36.11% H2 12 17.65% 29 42.65% 27 39.71% I1 13 16.25% 32 40.00% 35 43.75% I2 3 5.45% 25 45.45% 27 49.09% J1 12 22.22% 22 40.74% 20 37.04% J2 58 24.17% 90 37.50% 92 38.33% K 16 11.43% 65 46.43% 59 42.14% L 29 14.50% 94 47.00% 77 38.50% M 31 8.88% 262 75.07% 56 16.05% Statewide 221 (15.72%) 705 (50.14%) 480 (34.14%) Table 6. Food usage categories by turkey flocks statewide Winter 2014 Food category Number of Observations Percentage of Total observations Acorns/beechnuts 41 5.6% Apples/crabapples 77 10.6% Birdfeeder 432 59.4% Corn/grain 135 18.6% Corn in manure 11 1.5% Corn in ensilage 10 1.4% Standing corn 5 0.6% Dried berries/ Fruits on shrubs 2 0.2% TOTAL 727 100.0% (unknown foods) (181) 78.0% fed by people 3.5% corn from agriculture

Table 7. Numbers and percentages of winter flocks using birdfeeders by WMUs (2013 vs 2014) Number of flocks Percentage of flocks WMU Winter 2013 Winter 2014 Winter 2013 Winter 2014 A 2 0 14.3% 0.0% B 2 1 33.3% 33.3% C1 5 3 50.0% 50.0% C2 1 1 9.1% 25.0% D1 5 7 20.8% 58.3% D2 10 4 19.6% 25.0% E 6 2 28.6% 16.7% F 6 9 13.3% 50.0% G 31 18 26.1% 38.3% H1 14 6 24.6% 27.3% H2 22 20 24.2% 41.7% I1 17 22 21.0% 47.8% I2 16 18 30.2% 48.7% J1 12 19 20.7% 54.3% J2 61 62 21.3% 39.5% K 55 48 26.4% 55.8% L 47 69 23.9% 51.5% M 88 123 20.6% 55.7% Statewide 400 432 22.7% avg. 47.6% avg.

Table 8. Avian pox virus reports in flocks by WMUs Winter 2014 WMU Town Location # of turkeys in flock # in flock with pox C1 Gorham Mechanic St. 21 1 G Enfield Crystal Lake Rd. 22 1 F Campton Beech Hill 6 1 H2 Harrisville Prospect St. 8 1 I2 Sutton Corporation Hill Rd. 6 3 I2 Springfield Hogg Hill Rd. 27 2 J2 Chichester Hilliard Rd. 8 1 J2 Farmington United States 14 2 J2 Farmington Poor Farm Rd. 25 1 J2 Strafford Evan s Mt. Rd. 27 1 L Deerfield Birch Rd. 12 6 L Dover Piscataqua & Rabbit Rds. 4 1 L Dover 25 1 L Dover Bay View Rd. 3 1 L Epping Shepherd Lane 36 1 L Epping 16 1 M Greenland Caswell Rd. 18 4 M Greenland 8 1 M Kingston Mill Rd. 30 19 M Kingston 15 7 M Merrimack Nathan Hale Ln. 4 1 M Merrimack Jade Rd. 64 2 M Pelham Clydesdale Ave. 2 1 M Plaistow Kingston Rd. 40 1 M Portsmouth Islington St. 18 1