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There’s Still Time to Share Your Winter Wild Turkey Sightings

CONTACT:
Allison Keating (603) 352-9669
Andrew Timmins: (603) 271-1742
March 8, 2024

Concord, NH – The New Hampshire Fish and Game Department is asking the public to report their wild turkey sightings this winter by participating in the 2024 Winter Turkey Flock Survey, which runs through March 31. Information about the status of wintering wild turkeys is very important because severe weather and limited natural food supplies can present serious challenges for turkeys. It’s fun and easy to participate by visiting www.wildnh.com/surveys/turkey.html.

“A total of 835 flocks were reported from across the state during the 2023 Winter Turkey Flock Survey, with 15,098 turkeys recorded and an average of 18 turkeys per flock,” said Allison Keating, New Hampshire Fish and Game’s Turkey Project Leader. “That was a slight increase from 2022 when a total of 772 flocks and 13,201 turkeys were reported. The increase in sightings last winter may have been the result of more birds being drawn to backyard bird feeders due to a lack of natural food available. The fall of 2022 was not a good year for the production of acorns or beechnuts, two staple mast crops that support turkeys during the winter months.”

“As of March 1 this year, the Online Winter Flock Survey had generated 222 observations throughout the state,” said Keating. “This is a decrease from the 431 observations reported last winter at this time. We are hoping to hear from more people before the end of March, and counting on the data that this will provide”

“Many people like to see wild turkeys on the landscape because their presence is part of what makes New Hampshire unique,” said Keating. This is reflected through the survey with 88% of respondents indicating they like, or strongly like, seeing wild turkeys. While people enjoy seeing wild turkeys, the observations people share through the online survey greatly add to the Department’s understanding of the abundance, distribution, and survival of turkeys through the winter months here in the Granite State.

The Department also continues to monitor the prevalence of two viruses that are present in the wild turkey population: avian pox and lymphoproliferative disease virus (LPDV). The public is asked to keep an eye out this winter for any turkeys displaying lesions or wart-like protuberances on their head or neck areas and to report these observations through the online survey.

To learn more about these viruses, visit www.wildlife.state.nh.us/wildlife/turkeys/turkey-virus.html.

Wild turkey management and research is made possible by the federal Wildlife Restoration Program, which is funded by an excise tax on the sale of firearms, ammunition, and archery equipment.

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