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Hunting Pheasant Resort
Modern Pheasant Hunting
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South Dakota Pheasant Hunting–One of the Best in the U.S.

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The ring-necked pheasant is the state bird of South Dakota, and fittingly so; the Asian native has taken to South Dakota as if it were indigenous to the area. The bird was successfully introduced to the state in 1908 after previous attempts proved unsuccessful, and, although the pheasant is thought of as the all-American bird, it was not given a place in John James Audubon’s book, Audubon's Birds of America because of its Asian origin. The successful growth of the pheasant population in South Dakota over the past century has made South Dakota pheasant hunting the best in the country.

The Black Hills is the only area of South Dakota where pheasants are not found, and the south-central region is where most of the birds are located. South Dakota consistently reports the largest numbers of pheasants in the United States and is a magnet for hunters wanting to experience South Dakota pheasant hunting. The state offers the various habitats pheasants need to thrive. Woodlands and brushy thickets are necessary in the winter to provide shelter from snow and wind, with wetland cover also offering winter protection. These habitats also protect the birds from predators. In the spring grassland habitat is needed for hen pheasants to build and maintain nests. Areas in which more than half the land is farmed attract large numbers of pheasants, which get most of their diet from grain left on the ground, and nearby gravel roads provide the grit the birds need to break up and digest their food. Regions where these favorable conditions exist together are the best for South Dakota pheasant hunting.

Habitat is vital to increasing and sustaining high pheasant populations and ensuring the continued success of South Dakota pheasant hunting. High pheasant losses in winter, about 65% to 75%, could be lessened if more food and shelter were available. As in other pheasant hunting states, more intensive farming methods have caused the pheasant population to decline. There is now less grain on the ground for food, and chemicals have also taken a toll. Pesticides kill insects needed by the young birds, the weeds and brushy cover the pheasants require have been eliminated, and nitrate fertilizers can poison the birds. Unfortunately, when the pheasant population dips, and so does South Dakota pheasant hunting, with serious consequences for the state economy.

South Dakota pheasant hunting provides a huge economic boost to the state. In 2005, pheasant hunting brought in over 153 million dollars. As important as hunting is, to South Dakota it is important to create and maintain high quality habitat that can support the pheasant population needed to bring hunters into the state. To guarantee the continued success of pheasant hunting state agencies as well as groups such as Pheasants Forever are working to ensure that South Dakota pheasant hunting remains a viable, successful sport for future generations.



 

Hunting Pheasant Resort News

Almanac: Hunting trip to Iowa worked out - Minneapolis Star Tribune

NORTHERN IOWA -- The temperature was a finger-numbing 8 degrees. The sky clear. The sun rising behind me. My Lab and I had just started hiking through in an expansive public hunting area just across the Minnesota border when a rooster cackled, then ...

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OUTDOORS NOTEBOOK: Several N.D. refuges open for hunting, Ice safety ... - Grand Forks Herald

N.D. refuge hunting: Several national wildlife refuges in North Dakota are open to late-season upland game bird hunting. Arrowwood, Audubon, Des Lacs, J. Clark Salyer, Lake Alice, Lake Zahl, Long Lake, Lostwood, Tewaukon (pheasants only) and Upper ...

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Wash. biologist hazes swans away from deadly lead - Lexington Herald-Leader

SUMAS, Wash. -- Years of collecting dead carcasses and examining lead-poisoned livers have convinced Mike Smith of this: to save Pacific Coast trumpeter swans, he has to haze them. As the sun set behind Judson Lake - the likely source of the lead ...

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Better hazed than poisoned - Tacoma News Tribune

SUMAS, WHATCOM COUNTY – Years of collecting carcasses and examining lead-poisoned livers have convinced Mike Smith of this: To save Pacific Coast trumpeter swans, he has to haze them. As the sun set behind Judson Lake – the likely source of the ...

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Hazing Keeps Swans From Lead-Filled Lake - Redorbit.com

After years of gathering dead carcasses of Pacific Coast trumpeter swans, and examining their lead-poisoned livers, wildlife biologist Mike Smith became convinced the only way to save the birds was by hazing them. So he kept vigil with a night-vision ...

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