Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources

09/05/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/05/2024 08:31

Duck Hunters Should Take Advantage of This Year's Special Teal Season

Mallards are considered the benchmark species when it comes to population numbers, and mallards were up 8% from last year but are still down 16% from the long-term average.

"Those mallard numbers bounce back and forth, but it's pretty stable across the board," Maddox said. "The big thing is the American wigeon was up 55%. Nobody knows what to attribute it to. They're up over the long-term average by 12%.

"Another species that impacts hunters in Alabama is green-winged teal, which are up 20% from last year and up 38% over the long-term average, so that's looking good for that species. But we don't see many of them, if any at all, during the early teal season. They migrate later in the year.

"Gadwall numbers are down a little bit, but up 11% over the long-term average, so there's no worry there. Scaup numbers are up but not enough to push us out of the one-bird daily bag limit. All the other species look fine."

Maddox said the bag limits for the 2024-2025 seasons are unchanged with a six-duck daily bag limit, which may include no more than four mallards (no more than two of which can be female), three wood ducks, one mottled duck, two black ducks, two redheads, one pintail, two canvasbacks and one scaup. The coot limit is 15 per day. The merganser limit is five per day, only two of which can be hooded mergansers.

Duck season is split into two segments, the first being November 29, 2024, through December 1, 2024, and the second December 6, 2024, through January 31, 2025.

Hunters can also take advantage of an early goose season that starts on September 7, 2024, and runs through October 6, 2024. The other goose season segments are October 19, 2024, through November 2, 2024, November 29, 2024, through December 1, 2024, and December 6, 2024, through January 31, 2025. The aggregate bag limit for dark geese (Canada, white-fronted, and Brant) is five per day. The aggregate bag limit for light geese (snow, blue, Ross's) is also five per day.

Because the waterfowl survey occurs early in the year, Maddox said that not all the migrating ducks are counted.

"When they're doing the counts in May in Canada and the U.S., they're looking at breeding pairs, and they don't account for the number of juveniles that will be on the landscape," he said. "The fall flight is predicated on the number of surviving adults that make it to the next season plus the number of offspring that were hatched this summer. A lot of birds we harvest up and down the flyway are juvenile birds, which is in excess of the population.

"I imagine that our fall flight will look pretty good, although we definitely need some water in the South."

Maddox said the number of waterfowl hunters continues to climb in Alabama.

"Based on stamp sales, we set another record with 38,852 state stamps sold in 2023," he said. "We've set records each year for the past five years. We've got duck hunters all across the state, whether they're hunting wood ducks in central Alabama or hunting big ducks in the north or in the south."

Although not regulated under the waterfowl framework, a sandhill crane hunting opportunity is available in Alabama through a limited quota system. Season dates are November 29, 2024, through January 5, 2025, and January 13-26, 2025.

Applications for sandhill crane permits will be accepted only at www.outdooralabama.com, the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources' website. Registration opened September 4, 2024, and closes September 25, 2024, at 12 noon. Drawn hunters have until October 2, 2024, to pass the ID and Regulations Test, purchase the selected Sandhill Crane Harvest Permit and accept their hunting status. If not completed by the deadline, an alternate will be promoted into that hunter slot. Visit www.outdooralabama.com/what-hunt/sandhill-crane-hunting-alabamafor details.

During the 2023-2024 sandhill crane season, 451 hunters harvested 322 sandhill cranes.

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