Thursday, September 11, 2025

North Dakota 2025 pheasant numbers look similar to 2024, survey shows

 By Brad Dokken

The numbers are in, and North Dakota pheasant numbers are similar to last year, the Game and Fish Department said Monday, Sept. 8, in reporting results from its annual roadside surveys conducted in late July and August.

Total pheasants observed (91.6 per 100 miles) are down 3% from last year, and broods (11.4 per 100 miles) are down 1%, the department said. The average brood size (5.1) is down 6%. Despite the slight declines, the statewide number of pheasants observed per 100 miles is 48% above the 10-year average, Game and Fish said. The final summary is based on 285 survey runs made along 100 brood routes across North Dakota.

Here’s a look at pheasant numbers by region:

  • Northwest: Observers in the northwest counted 14.7 broods and 115 pheasants per 100 miles, down from 20.8 broods and 164 pheasants in 2024. Average brood size was 4.3 chicks.
  • Southeast: Results from the southeast showed 9.6 broods and 73 pheasants per 100 miles, up from 7.9 broods and 57 pheasants in 2024. Average brood size was 4.7 chicks.
  • Southwest: Statistics from southwestern North Dakota indicated 14.8 broods and 125 pheasants per 100 miles, up from 13.8 broods and 119 pheasants in 2024. Average brood size was 5.8 chicks.
  • Northeast: The northeast district, generally containing secondary pheasant habitat with lower pheasant numbers compared to the rest of the state, showed 4.9 broods and 37 pheasants per 100 miles, compared with 4.3 broods and 37 pheasants last year. Average brood size was 4.4 chicks.

The southwest and northwest districts also had the highest pheasant numbers in spring crowing count surveys, which were up 6% from 2024 across the state’s primary pheasant range, the Game and Fish Department reported in late June. Observers tallied 31.1 crows per stop in the southwest during the spring survey, up from 28.8 in 2024; and 21.3 crows per stop in the northwest, down from 21.5 in 2024.

Read the full Grad Forks Herald article

 

 

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