Posted on 09/22/2022 3:46:11 PM PDT by Candor7
Once again hunters can register their moose online and submit tooth as proof.
Moose season is underway this week and hunters are out in big numbers this year.
The province issued 5,107 licences for the hunt, which runs until Sept. 24.
That's the highest number since 1995.
Dwayne Sabine, a biologist with the Department of Natural Resources and Energy Development, said this year's increase was largely due to a drop in hunter success rates.
"So essentially we were able to issue a few more licences to harvest the same number of moose that we expected to harvest over the last couple of years," Sabine said.
Moose hunt applications open with most licences up for grabs since 1995
The moose population is relatively stable in New Brunswick, he said.
"We watch very closely, and we manage very closely, to make sure that we're issuing licences at a level that is sustainable in the long term."
Pulling teeth to register online
For the second year in a row, hunters will be able to register their harvest online instead of going to one of the nine moose registration stations in the province.
The online registration option involves pulling and submitting an incisor from the animal. The tooth must be delivered to an office of the Department of Natural Resources and Energy Development within 14 days of online registration, according to the department's website.
Of the 3,017 moose registered last year, about nine per cent were done through the online system, according to the province.
Sabine said the program was successful in its inaugural year and he thinks it will quickly gain traction.
"We expect to see an increase in online registrations this year for sure, as clients become more used to it," he said.
"The word has gotten around now, and we've published a lot of information on our website."
Hunters instructed to extract moose and bear teeth
Both options collect similar information about the animal, according to Sabine.
He said department staff will pull a specific tooth from the harvested moose at the in-person stations, but when registering online hunters have to do it themselves.
A tooth can hold valuable information about population trends, he said, as they age like a tree, with rings on the inside.
"We can determine a very precise age of the animal at the time of harvest from those teeth and that gives us an accurate representation, at least for harvested animals, of how old they are," he said.
Sabine said the online registration was launched in response to some hunters sharing challenges about getting to one of the registration stations.
Hunters who register online, but don't drop off a tooth sample at a department office within 14 days, will be ineligible for the following year's moose draw.
(Anybody Home?)
Many of my relatives are now out in the bush for this hunt.
A moose once bit my sister.
Did you invite the Mosse in for dinner?
That’s the one that hit my sister! Someone had to start it off.
There’s no Mosse in my home.
I’ve had bear...but not moose. Prefer NYS Whitetail.
Kill moose and squirrel!
I'll send a bull mosse right over!
Don't want you to feel left out!
She’s hot!
Very lean meat with lots of healthy stuff in it.
You can read about the health benefits here:
Nutritional treasures found in moose meat, antlers:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/newfoundland-labrador/functional-lipids-in-moose-1.4987682
She’s hot!>>>>>>>>>
LOL, Don’t tell Laz!
The bull moose in the picture represents the US Federal Government and you all know whom the cow represents.
She was asking for it.
That bull moose has a smile on his face.
Lol! That’s a reply I would have expected out of Laz.
Good.
A moose bit my sister one time.
5.56mm
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.