A few months back I asked the following questions so you could tell me what the membership here knows about HIP. Thank you to all who responded. You helped me craft some discussion points. I am doing some part time work assisting a few states and USFWS to educate hunters about HIP in order to improve the utility of the data. Hopefully you'll be seeing or hearing more about HIP and its importance over the next year, https://www.calwaterfowl.org/hip/. I have been working on some articles, podcasts and other ways to get information out to hunters and to answer common questions. Here are the questions I asked the members. Harvest data is used directly in setting hunting regulations for mourning doves, a few species of ducks and a couple of populations of geese. But for rails, snipe, gallinules and maybe a population or two of sandhill cranes, it is the primary biological information that managers have about those birds.
Did you buy a license for the 2019-2020 hunting season?
Did you get HIP certified for the 2019-2020 season?
Did you hunt migratory birds during the 2019-2020 season?
Did you buy you license and HIP online, through an app, at an agency office or at a store?
When you bought your license/HIP certification, did you answer the questions about how many ducks, geese, doves, cranes, coots/rails/snipe/gallinules you shot in the 2018-2019 season?
Did the store clerk, license agent, or agency personnel ask you the HIP questions?
Did you register for HIP online, on an app or by phone?
Did you buy get your HIP at the same time as you bought your license?
Do you know why those questions are asked?
Do you know how those answers are used?
Do you believe that your answers help in harvest management to provide hunting opportunity or take away opportunity?
Do you consider yourself knowledgeable about migratory bird hunting surveys or management?
Do you consider yourself knowledgeable about HIP?
Would you like to learn more about HIP?
What would be the best way for you to learn more about HIP?
Do you have anything you'd like to tell me about HIP certification?
HIP is a partnership between hunters, states and USFWS, as in everything else with migratory bird management. In order to understand how hunting seasons, bird populations and hunter effort are related, managers need to understand each part. Getting HIP certified is the first step of the process in understanding how many hunters there are and how many birds they harvest, not the end of the process. Harvest estimation is a 3 part process. This includes getting your HIP certification, then a diary survey and finally the wing survey. HIP registers you as a hunter for those species you report hunting. Then, if USFWS draws your name, you will be asked to keep a diary of the birds you take that year. If you participate in the diary survey one year, you may be asked to participate in the wing survey in subsequent years. Your answers to the HIP questions are NOT used to estimate harvest.
Every migratory bird hunter is required to get a HIP certification. When you get your HIP certification, your name, address and answers to a few questions are collected by the state. The questions you are supposed to be asked by the license clerk help determine how successful you were last year. I say supposed because one significant problem is that license clerks in some stores either answer all the questions or refuse to ask hunters the questions. Your answers help USFWS survey hunters more efficiently than lumping everyone into a single sample. So if no answers are given then you get put in a pool of unsuccessful hunters and are less likely to be surveyed. This also drives up costs. If you are not asked the questions by the license clerk then please tell them that you want your correct answers recorded. If they refuse then ask to see a manager or get online and get your HIP certification through the state's licensing system.
You need HIP certification in each state you hunt and you should answer the questions about your success last year relative to your success in that state. So if you hunted in your home state last year and shot more than 30 ducks you will get put in the pool of very successful hunters for your state. Then if you travel to another state but only harvest a few ducks in that state, your name would be put in a less successful hunter pool for that state. When USFWS pulls samples to ask hunters to keep track of their harvest, you may get samples in one state or another or not at all.
Now that your name is in a sample pool, say not too successful Louisiana duck hunters, you might get be sent a letter by USFWS asking you to keep either a paper or electronic diary of your hunting trips. But in this example, your chance of being asked is probably lower that if you were in the pool of very successful South Carolina rail hunters. I used this to demonstrate why your answers are important. As you can imagine, its more difficult to identify successful rail or snipe hunters than moderately successful duck hunters, so the accuracy of the survey depends on your answers and survey participation.
At the risk of going on too long or simplifying all of the moving parts, I want to everyone to understand that HIP and the harvest surveys are used to provide sustainable hunting opportunity. Accurate harvest estimates are needed and used to show how hunting is compatible with the long-term maintenance of bird populations. I hope hunters will realize that they are integral to successful management, please do your part by accurately answering the questions and participating in the follow up surveys. It may be more important than ever this year because so many of the other surveys have been canceled due to the pandemic.
Here are links to some nice interactive graphics that are based on harvest survey information. I hope you will click the links and explore the uses of harvest data. Make sure you watch the videos on species, age and sex determination from wings. https://fws.gov/harvestsurvey/harvest-vis https://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/...rveys/MBHActivityHarvest2017-18and2018-19.pdf
Lastly, thank you to all hunters for registering for HIP and participating in the harvest surveys. You are helping manage the resource that you all care about. Your participation in all aspects of migratory gamebird management is vital and a model of conservation success.
Did you buy a license for the 2019-2020 hunting season?
Did you get HIP certified for the 2019-2020 season?
Did you hunt migratory birds during the 2019-2020 season?
Did you buy you license and HIP online, through an app, at an agency office or at a store?
When you bought your license/HIP certification, did you answer the questions about how many ducks, geese, doves, cranes, coots/rails/snipe/gallinules you shot in the 2018-2019 season?
Did the store clerk, license agent, or agency personnel ask you the HIP questions?
Did you register for HIP online, on an app or by phone?
Did you buy get your HIP at the same time as you bought your license?
Do you know why those questions are asked?
Do you know how those answers are used?
Do you believe that your answers help in harvest management to provide hunting opportunity or take away opportunity?
Do you consider yourself knowledgeable about migratory bird hunting surveys or management?
Do you consider yourself knowledgeable about HIP?
Would you like to learn more about HIP?
What would be the best way for you to learn more about HIP?
Do you have anything you'd like to tell me about HIP certification?
HIP is a partnership between hunters, states and USFWS, as in everything else with migratory bird management. In order to understand how hunting seasons, bird populations and hunter effort are related, managers need to understand each part. Getting HIP certified is the first step of the process in understanding how many hunters there are and how many birds they harvest, not the end of the process. Harvest estimation is a 3 part process. This includes getting your HIP certification, then a diary survey and finally the wing survey. HIP registers you as a hunter for those species you report hunting. Then, if USFWS draws your name, you will be asked to keep a diary of the birds you take that year. If you participate in the diary survey one year, you may be asked to participate in the wing survey in subsequent years. Your answers to the HIP questions are NOT used to estimate harvest.
Every migratory bird hunter is required to get a HIP certification. When you get your HIP certification, your name, address and answers to a few questions are collected by the state. The questions you are supposed to be asked by the license clerk help determine how successful you were last year. I say supposed because one significant problem is that license clerks in some stores either answer all the questions or refuse to ask hunters the questions. Your answers help USFWS survey hunters more efficiently than lumping everyone into a single sample. So if no answers are given then you get put in a pool of unsuccessful hunters and are less likely to be surveyed. This also drives up costs. If you are not asked the questions by the license clerk then please tell them that you want your correct answers recorded. If they refuse then ask to see a manager or get online and get your HIP certification through the state's licensing system.
You need HIP certification in each state you hunt and you should answer the questions about your success last year relative to your success in that state. So if you hunted in your home state last year and shot more than 30 ducks you will get put in the pool of very successful hunters for your state. Then if you travel to another state but only harvest a few ducks in that state, your name would be put in a less successful hunter pool for that state. When USFWS pulls samples to ask hunters to keep track of their harvest, you may get samples in one state or another or not at all.
Now that your name is in a sample pool, say not too successful Louisiana duck hunters, you might get be sent a letter by USFWS asking you to keep either a paper or electronic diary of your hunting trips. But in this example, your chance of being asked is probably lower that if you were in the pool of very successful South Carolina rail hunters. I used this to demonstrate why your answers are important. As you can imagine, its more difficult to identify successful rail or snipe hunters than moderately successful duck hunters, so the accuracy of the survey depends on your answers and survey participation.
At the risk of going on too long or simplifying all of the moving parts, I want to everyone to understand that HIP and the harvest surveys are used to provide sustainable hunting opportunity. Accurate harvest estimates are needed and used to show how hunting is compatible with the long-term maintenance of bird populations. I hope hunters will realize that they are integral to successful management, please do your part by accurately answering the questions and participating in the follow up surveys. It may be more important than ever this year because so many of the other surveys have been canceled due to the pandemic.
Here are links to some nice interactive graphics that are based on harvest survey information. I hope you will click the links and explore the uses of harvest data. Make sure you watch the videos on species, age and sex determination from wings. https://fws.gov/harvestsurvey/harvest-vis https://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/...rveys/MBHActivityHarvest2017-18and2018-19.pdf
Lastly, thank you to all hunters for registering for HIP and participating in the harvest surveys. You are helping manage the resource that you all care about. Your participation in all aspects of migratory gamebird management is vital and a model of conservation success.
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