Research teams witnessed more than 855,500 waterfowl while conducting the 2015 Maryland Midwinter Waterfowl Survey. The total was slightly lower than the 905,000 birds observed during 2014, but higher than the five year average of 757,000.
Each winter, aerial survey teams of pilots and biologists from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Maryland Department of Natural Resources make visual estimates of ducks, geese and swans along Maryland’s Chesapeake Bay shoreline and Atlantic coast.
Biologists attribute this year’s count to the fact large areas of the Bay’s tributaries were ice covered during the survey period, concentrating waterfowl where they were more easily counted.
Maryland Midwinter Waterfowl Survey Highlights:
Dabbling ducks were less abundant (90,800) compared to last winter (128,000).
Diving duck numbers (192,000) were similar to the numbers observed last winter (190,300).
The survey estimate for redhead ducks (32,200) was the highest since the mid-1970s.
The canvasback count (64,200) was one of the highest since the mid-1960s, and similar to the January 2014 estimate (68,400).
Survey teams also observed large numbers of wintering Canada geese (504,700), mainly along the upper Chesapeake Bay.
The Midwinter Waterfowl Survey has been conducted annually throughout the United States since the early 1950s. The Maryland survey results are ultimately pooled with results from other states to provide a measure of the distributional changes and long-term trends of waterfowl wintering in the Atlantic Flyway.
source: Maryland Department of Natural Resources
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