ALBANY, N.Y. — Moose die-offs in Minnesota and New Hampshire have led wildlife biologists in New York to launch a three-year study of moose in the Adirondack Mountains.
"The aim is to figure out how many moose we have, where they are, what kind of habitat they're using and whether the population is stable, declining or growing," said state wildlife biologist Ed Reed.
"We have a basic idea of the population, around 500 to 1,000, based on road kill, hunter reports and some aerial surveys," Reed said. "But we don't have enough of that for a sound estimate."
Starting this winter, the Department of Environmental Conservation is contracting with the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry, the Wildlife Conservation Society and Cornell University to do an in-depth research project on Adirondack moose.
Aerial counts by helicopter will be conducted in January, when the dark animals stand out against the snow. Cornell will analyze DNA from moose scat to get information on diet and population genetics. And GPS satellite tracking collars will be used to follow four cows in real time on a computer screen, much like companies keep track of their truck fleets.
Reed said two young bull moose have radio collars, which are telemetry collars that require going out in the field with an antenna and receiver to track the animal down. "That's very labor-intensive and expensive," Reed said.
New York is on the southern edge of moose range. Its population was wiped out in the 1800s but has gradually grown from animals that wandered in from other northern states and Canada starting in around 1980. The state doesn't allow moose hunting but solicits information from deer hunters who encounter moose in the field.
Minnesota has seen a 52 percent drop in its moose population since 2010, according to the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. From a high of 8,840 in 2006, the population has dropped to an estimated 2,760. The decline prompted the state to close its moose hunting season in 2013 and 2014 and launch a $1.2 million seven-year research effort involving GPS collaring 110 moose.