Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife invites moose permit applications

6 years ago

AUGUSTA, Maine — The Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife has announced that applications for the 2018 Maine Moose Permit Lottery are now being accepted online.

Last year’s moose hunt saw steady success, according to department officials, with Aroostook County topping the list of successful hunting areas.

With 2,080 moose permits issued in 2017, 1,518 hunters were successful in getting their moose. Hunter success rates varied throughout different regions of the state with, over 80 percent of the hunters getting moose in Wildlife Management Districts 1-3 and 5 and 6 in Aroostook County.

For success rates in all Wildlife Management Districts and in each season, please visit the 2017 Maine Moose Harvest Summary.

Weather had an impact for many hunters, particularly the first week. Moose tend to travel less and spend more time in cover when it’s hot. Hunter effort also declines.

The 73 percent success rate for hunters is consistent with the 71 percent success rate for moose hunters over the past five years. Success rate for turkey hunters generally is over 30 percent, bear hunters in Maine are successful 25 percent of the time and deer hunters in Maine are successful 15-20 percent of the time.

Maine’s moose season is split into three segments, with six-day seasons in September and October. Temperatures were above 80 degrees on the first few days of the season in September, and some warmer weather in the 70s prevailed during the early part of the October season.

Wildlife Biologist Lee Kantar reported that high success rates for moose hunters in northern Maine are consistent with what he is seeing with the DIFW moose survival study. “Adult survival rates are consistently high in our study areas, and calf survival rates are higher in our northern Maine study area compared to our western Maine study area,” he indicated.

The radio collar study is just one component of the research that MDIFW conducts on moose. IFW also utilizes aerial flights to assess population abundance and the composition of the moose herd. During the moose hunting season, biologists also examine teeth to determine a moose’s age, measure antler spread, monitor the number of ticks a moose carries, and examine cow ovaries in late fall to determine reproductive rates.

Biologists are preparing to recommend moose permit numbers for the fall 2018 moose season. The number of available moose permits is based upon population numbers and the composition of the moose population in wildlife management districts, as well as the population goals and objectives for that district.

For more information or to apply for a permit, visit mefishwildlife.com. The deadline to apply is 11:59 p.m. on May 15, 2018.