Tuesday, July 20, 2021

Wildlife Habitat Canada Grants Support Delta Waterfowl’s HunteR3, Duck Production Efforts

The funds will help Delta Waterfowl enhance and defend hunting opportunities across Canada, while also maintaining the organization’s fleet of mallard-producing Hen Houses.

WINNIPEG, MANITOBA — A pair of grants from Wildlife Habitat Canada (WHC) will boost Delta Waterfowl’s duck production and HunteR3 recruitment and advocacy programs throughout Canada.

The first grant of $75,000 will support The Duck Hunters Organization’s HunteR3 efforts to secure the future of waterfowl hunting across Canada. Delta’s HunteR3 programs include First Hunt, the largest waterfowl-specific hunter recruitment program in North America; the University Hunting Program, which educates non-hunting wildlife students about hunting’s role in conservation; and Defending the Hunt, which expands and protects waterfowl hunting opportunities.

Recent Defending the Hunt victories include increased Sunday hunting opportunities in New Brunswick, advancing the modernization of Canada’s waterfowl hunting regulations, reducing the game-bird hunting age to 10 in Alberta, retaining hunting access on Gravelly Bay in Ontario, and more.

“Approval of this grant once again proves WHC’s confidence in our efforts to help stem the decline of waterfowl hunters in Canada,” said Jim Fisher, Delta’s senior director of Canadian conservation and hunting policy. “HunteR3 programs in recruitment, access, and advocacy are critical to the future of hunting in Canada. And we couldn’t achieve these successes without WHC’s support.”

The second WHC grant, also to the tune of $75,000, focuses on Delta’s duck production efforts, specifically maintaining mallard-producing Hen Houses across Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta. Delta Hen Houses provide mallard hens with safer, more productive places to nest. In intensely farmed regions of prairie Canada, mallards using a Hen House are 12 times more likely to hatch a nest than those nesting in the grass cover. Overall, nest success in Hen Houses is 60 to 90 percent, compared with less than 10 percent for mallards nesting in the grass.

Delta Waterfowl maintains more than 8,500 Hen Houses in Canada and the United States.

“We greatly appreciate WHC’s longstanding and generous support of Delta Waterfowl’s mission,” Fisher said. “These grants will go far in benefitting ducks and duck hunters.”

WHC funding comes from sales of the Canadian Wildlife Habitat Conservation Stamp and Print, a.k.a. Canada’s “duck stamp.” WHC in turn offers grants to conserve, restore and enhance wildlife habitat, foster conservation leadership, promote conservation contributions of waterfowl hunters, and encourage waterfowl hunting participation. Since 1985, the stamp has provided more than $55 million for waterfowl conservation, a real legacy for hunter-conservationists.

The stamp — required of anyone who hunts waterfowl in Canada — has not increased in price ($8.50) since 1991.

“Can you name another activity that hasn’t gone up in price in 30 years?” said Fisher, an avid waterfowler. “The revenue the stamp generates is crucial in so many ways to the future of waterfowl hunting in Canada. We continue to encourage the federal government to increase the price of these stamps.”

For more information about purchasing the Canadian Duck Stamp and Print, visit WHC.org.

Delta Waterfowl is The Duck Hunters Organization, a leading conservation group working to produce ducks and ensure the tradition of duck hunting in North America. Visit deltawaterfowl.org.