• Photo
Mourning Dove_20110829155135_JPG

Mourning Dove (Photo Courtesy: DNR)

  • Indiana News
Hoosier Lottery looks for ideas from private firms
Lottery looking to maximize profits

The Indiana State Lottery Commission is looking to private …

Lugar completes Capital Challenge race
Lugar completes Capital Challenge race

At 80 years old, Senator Richard Lugar completed his …

Gregg: Wipe out corporate income tax
Gregg: Wipe out corporate income tax

Democratic gubernatorial candidate John Gregg wants to …

Jobs available at Indiana state parks
Jobs available at Indiana state parks

A number of state parks across Indiana have immediate seasonal …

Skechers to offer $40 million in refunds as part of shoe settlement
Skechers Settles Shoe Suit

Skechers filed a settlement on May 16 with Indiana, the Federal…

Advertisement

Dove season is around the corner

Updated: Monday, 29 Aug 2011, 3:53 PM EDT
Published : Monday, 29 Aug 2011, 3:53 PM EDT

INDIANAPOLIS (WANE) - Mourning dove hunting season opens statewide on Thursday, Sept. 1, and continues through Oct. 16.

According to the Indiana Department of Natural Resources, dove season reopens with the start of the upland small-game season on Friday, Nov. 4 and will conclude on Nov. 27.

Hunting hours are from one-half hour before sunrise until sunset. The daily bag limit is 15 with a possession limit of 30.

“Most mourning doves are harvested in September but great dove hunting can be found later in the season with a little scouting,” said Budd Veverka, DNR’s farmland game research biologist. “Looking at data from the past five years, I would expect to see approximately 13,000 dove hunters harvest nearly 227,000 mourning doves in 2011.

According to Veverka, doves are found throughout the state, but will concentrate in areas associated with farming and recently harvested grain fields with water nearby are typically hotspots for dove hunting.

Veverka also reminded hunters to remember to respect property rights and get permission, clean up spent shells, and drink plenty of water to prevent dehydration.

To hunt mourning doves, Indiana residents must purchase an annual hunting license for $17, or hunt/fish combo for $25, and the Game Bird Habitat Stamp for $6.75. Nonresidents must also purchase the game bird habitat stamp in addition to the $80 annual nonresident hunting license or the $31 five-day nonresident hunting license.

Youth ages 17 and younger who are Indiana residents can get a youth consolidated hunt/trap license, which includes all Indiana Stamp privileges (including the Game Bird Habitat Stamp). Federal regulations require all licensed dove hunters (including lifetime license holders) to register with the Migratory Bird Harvest Information Program (HIP) and carry proof of registration while hunting. HIP registration is free and available at http://www.in.gov/dnr/fishwild/3567.htm or by calling 1-866-671-4499.

Hunters using state fish & wildlife areas or state-owned reservoirs are required to use non-toxic shot when hunting mourning doves. Additionally, hunters may not hunt migratory birds with a shotgun capable of holding more than three shells (i.e., shotgun must be “plugged”).

More than a thousand mourning doves are banded with leg bands each summer in Indiana to determine mourning dove harvest rates, estimate annual survival, and provide information on the geographical distribution of the harvest.

Information on dove survival and harvest rates is key to understanding the effects of annual hunting regulations on mourning dove populations. If you harvest a banded bird, you can report it by calling 1-800-327-BAND (2263) or at www.reportband.gov .

Hunters may keep any bands they recover.

Go to http://www.in.gov/dnr/fishwild/2713.htm for more information regarding dove hunting.

Find out where to hunt, click here: http://www.in.gov/dnr/fishwild/5427.htm

 

Ground rules for posting comments: No profanity or personal attacks. No racially charged comments.  If  it's not something you would say to someone's face, it's most likely inappropriate. Please comment on the subject of the story itself. If you do not follow these rules, we will remove your post. Repeat offenders will be banned from making future comments.  Keep it civil, folks! WANE is not responsible for the content posted in this comment section.

  • Comments (Login not required)
Advertisement
Advertisement

 

Advertisement