The Shiras moose population in Wyoming is estimated at 12,000 and has significantly increased in size and distribution since the late 1800s. At present, the Wyoming Game and Fish Department operates within a planned management system involving inventory, objective and strategy setting, and monitoring. Wyoming's moose population is subdivided into discrete herd units, with each being managed toward a population objective. Objectives are set according to public input and biological considerations. Helicopter surveys, hunter harvest surveys, tooth aging, and population modeling are tools used to manage moose in Wyoming
Moose have expanded their range in the northern tier of the United States and along the Rocky Mounta...
Moose populations are managed for sustainable yield balanced against costs caused by damage to fores...
The present status and management policy in Norway is briefly presented. The annual bag has in the l...
Moose are believed to have entered Wyoming from Montana and Idaho within the past 150 years. Moose d...
At the request of the Shoshone and Arapahoe Indian Tribes, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service hired ...
We review the state of knowledge of moose (Alces alces shirasi) in the western US with respect to th...
A review of historical accounts, field observations, harvest information, and limited aerial survey ...
Moose have been subject to major hunting pressure since the start of the settlement period. By the e...
The estimated moose population has increased from 2,000 in the early 1900s to 20-25,000. Objectives ...
Increasing moose populations in Vermont prompted the initiation of a study in 1980 to monitor distri...
This paper discusses the collection and application of moose aerial survey data by management jurisd...
Moose (Alces alces shirasi) were trapped in Utah in 1978, Wyoming in 1979 and in 1987, and were rele...
Both declining and increasing moose (Alces alces) populations have been reported across North Americ...
Prior to 1978 moose (Alces alces shirasi) were rare in Colorado. To augment to population moose were...
In the early 1990’s the North American moose population was estimated at about 1 million. Population...
Moose have expanded their range in the northern tier of the United States and along the Rocky Mounta...
Moose populations are managed for sustainable yield balanced against costs caused by damage to fores...
The present status and management policy in Norway is briefly presented. The annual bag has in the l...
Moose are believed to have entered Wyoming from Montana and Idaho within the past 150 years. Moose d...
At the request of the Shoshone and Arapahoe Indian Tribes, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service hired ...
We review the state of knowledge of moose (Alces alces shirasi) in the western US with respect to th...
A review of historical accounts, field observations, harvest information, and limited aerial survey ...
Moose have been subject to major hunting pressure since the start of the settlement period. By the e...
The estimated moose population has increased from 2,000 in the early 1900s to 20-25,000. Objectives ...
Increasing moose populations in Vermont prompted the initiation of a study in 1980 to monitor distri...
This paper discusses the collection and application of moose aerial survey data by management jurisd...
Moose (Alces alces shirasi) were trapped in Utah in 1978, Wyoming in 1979 and in 1987, and were rele...
Both declining and increasing moose (Alces alces) populations have been reported across North Americ...
Prior to 1978 moose (Alces alces shirasi) were rare in Colorado. To augment to population moose were...
In the early 1990’s the North American moose population was estimated at about 1 million. Population...
Moose have expanded their range in the northern tier of the United States and along the Rocky Mounta...
Moose populations are managed for sustainable yield balanced against costs caused by damage to fores...
The present status and management policy in Norway is briefly presented. The annual bag has in the l...