A total of eight elk are harvested in depredation season

Game and Parks considers season a success; plans input meeting on August 16 in Paxton

A total of eight elk were harvested during Nebraska’s first special elk depredation season, according to the Nebraska Game and Parks.

Five bulls and three cows were taken during the July 1-31 season on private land in specific parts of Lincoln, Perkins, Keith, Deuel and Garden counties.

Total participation in the season was 179 hunters – 153 residents and 26 nonresidents – who purchased 211 permits. No hunter filled more than one permit and one nonresident was successful in taking an elk.

Permits were available to residents, nonresidents and landowners who own at least 80 acres within the hunting area. Landowners were required to hunt their own land. 

The season was designed to allow for as many potential hunters as possible in a geographic area regulated by landowner permission for access. 

Input Meeting to be Held

The Nebraska Game and Parks will host a Landowner Elk Meeting in Paxton, at the Windy Gap Saloon on Tuesday Aug., 16, at 2 p.m. to gather input regarding the Special Depredation Season held in July, along with the upcoming elk seasons and harvest. 

The meeting is open to landowners in the Box Elder Elk Management unit.

Other topics of discussion may include regulation and legislative changes, as well as input regarding the depredation procedures.

G & P Considers Season
a Success

“I would call the season a success, with eight elk harvested in a month compared to our general elk season, when five or six elk typically are harvested in six months in this area,” said Alicia Hardin, wildlife administrator for the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission. “This is right in the window of what we anticipated for harvest during this season.”

Game and Parks staff have worked with landowners in this area for several years to lower elk herds to reduce damage to the cropland, including trampling, wallowing and consumption of crops, Hardin said. The small herds that live there stay through harvest, then disperse, making it difficult for hunters to take elk during the late general season.

“The elk removed from this smaller population and the increased pressure to the area should lead to less damage to crop fields,” Hardin said.

Because permits were unlimited, hunters had time to obtain permission to hunt before buying; generally, when a limited number of permits are issued, there is a rush to obtain available permits whether one has gained access or not, she said.

The special season is not expected to affect the general elk season given the size of the area included in the season — roughly 873 square miles of 23,770 square miles included in the two elk units (North Platte River and Box Elder). 

Small herds in the special season boundary also may have dispersed due to hunting pressure. Hunters working with landowners in the area can see successful results, she said.

For more information about the season or for frequently asked questions, visit outdoornebraska.gov/depredation.

 

The Grant Tribune-Sentinel

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