Waterfowl News

Mandatory Harvest Information Program (HIP)

If you’re 16 years old or older and hunt migratory birds (ducks, coots, geese, doves, woodcock, rails, snipe, or gallinules), you must get a Harvest Information Program certification and carry proof of your HIP certification with you whenever you’re hunting migratory birds. You must get HIP-certified in every state you hunt migratory birds.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and state wildlife management agencies use HIP to estimate the number of migratory birds harvested each year. The USFWS selects a random sample of HIP-certified migratory bird hunters and sends them a survey. Survey questions vary from what species you hunted and how many you harvested to a request to send in a wing from each harvested bird. Biologists use these data to determine the effect of hunting regulations on harvest levels and evaluate the ratio of young birds to adult birds in the harvest to determine recruitment rates (young surviving to enter the adult population).

How do I get HIP-certified?

Get your HIP certification online or at LDWF Headquarters at 2000 Quail Drive in Baton Rouge. No course or test is required; simply answer a few short registration questions.

HIP certification is no longer available at retail license vendors because of poor compliance with asking registration questions and thus providing invalid information on migratory bird species hunted and relative success needed for selecting hunters for harvest surveys. As part of a multi-state pilot study coordinated by the Wildlife Management Institute to address invalid registration data, LDWF has limited HIP certification to online or in-person at LDWF headquarters in Baton Rouge.

How much does HIP certification cost?

HIP certification is free.

What if I have a lifetime license?

You still must get HIP-certified every year. You can get your HIP certification online or at LDWF Headquarters at 2000 Quail Drive in Baton Rouge.

 

Get Your Federal Electronic Duck Stamp

Effective August 1, 2014, Louisiana waterfowl hunters can purchase a Federal Duck Stamp online and through license vendors.

At U.S. Post Offices and at www.duckstamp.com – $25.00 From LDWF license vendors, online licensing, and by phone (877-447-1318) – $27.22

The Federal Duck Stamp is required for all waterfowl hunters, including those who are not required to purchase a hunting license. Hunters under the age of 16 are exempt. Hunters, who purchase their Federal Duck Stamp online, phone or mobile, will receive a confirmation number. If you purchase your stamp from a retail vendor or LDWF online licensing, you will receive a printed receipt. Both the confirmation number and printed receipt will be accepted as evidence of the purchase for 45 days and must be possessed while hunting waterfowl. The paper stamp will be mailed to the purchaser. The proof of purchase will expire after 45 days from the date of purchase. All Federal Duck Stamps expire on June 30, regardless of when issued.

Zoning Map

 

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Season Dates and Regulations

Waterfowl Season 2020-2021

The Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries Commission has set the duck hunting and other migratory bird hunting season dates for the 2020-2021 season.

See A Complete Dove, Teal, Duck, Goose, and Deer Schedule

 

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Duck Blind For Sale

Duck Blind For Sale

$300

Lake Bistineau

 

Click Photo For A Larger View

Click Photo For A Larger View

4-Man Blind All Metal Framing Plastic Barrel Flotation “Dry” Area Dog Ramp 7′ Shell Shelf

Requires very little work Read more

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2018 Duck Species Breakdown

2018 Numbers are Down but Populations Remain Healthy

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) today released its report on 2018 Trends in Duck Breeding Populations, based on surveys conducted in May and early June by FWS and Canadian Wildlife Service.

Overall duck numbers in the survey area remain high. Total populations were estimated at 41.2 million breeding ducks in the traditional survey area, 13 percent lower than last year’s estimate of 47.3 million and 17 percent above the long-term average. The projected mallard fall flight index is 11.4 million birds, down from the 2017 estimate of 12.9 million.  Republished from Ducks Unlimited.Com

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Bob Breeds “Coach”

Bob has a chocolate lab, “Coach”, who has turned out to be an excellent hunting dog so it came as no surprise when a fellow hunter wanted to breed his female lab to Bob’s male.

“How did everything go with breeding “Coach”, I asked him

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$384,949 Federal Study Looks at ‘Plasticity in Duck Penis Length’

(CNSnews.com) – The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded a $384,949 grant to Yale University for a study on “Sexual Conflict, Social Behavior and the Evolution of Waterfowl Genitalia”, according to the recovery.gov website.

The grant description says,“The project examines how reproductive morphology covaries with season, age, and social environment in a diverse sample of duck species that differ in ecology, territoriality and breeding system.”

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New Decking Added To Our Bridges

We got the new decking finished and completed another annual “Camp Clean Up” day.

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Salvinia Sprayer Caught Napping

The following photos were posted to the Lake Bistineau Facts FaceBook Page by J.C. Calhoun. The comments are well worth the time to read them.  To view larger photos go to our photo page by clicking here.

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Winter Draw Downs – Lake Bistineau

Winter Draw Downs – Lake Bistineau

Not to argue the merits of a lake draw down. Simply put, drawing down Lake Bistineau is something that is here to stay. But taking exception to what has been done in the last few years of drawing the lake down from mid-summer or early fall until the end of November is a plan that isn’t working.

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