Start with High Rock.
Based on the number of Cormorants I saw on my last trip to Jordan Lake, I believe the time has come to have an open hunting season for these Shad predators. The Shad have finally made a come back only to be consumed by these birds instead of our beloved Crappie.
SCDNR scheduled open season last year on the Santee Cooper lakes and I have been told that 33,000 were reported killed. I would think the NC Wildlife Resources could generate more revenues from the sale of a special license to hunt these over populated birds.
Monk
Start with High Rock.
boots
I had a 13" crappie Tuesday that had survived a cormorant attack. He had a familiar bite mark behind his dorsal fin. Seems like every trip,I catch one like that.
I think they need to be hunted on Falls also. The upper end of the lake is full of them. Seeing more up the river than ever before.
I used to catch them frequently on bush hooks. Always dispatched them with extreme prejudice. One time fishing the Shallotte river I had one get tangled in my line and reeled it in and man did that sucker bite the piss out of me! They're real bad down this way, too. You can hunt marsh hens, and they're harmless, so I say not only open a season but put a bounty on them.
Last edited by friedfish; 11-15-2014 at 10:36 PM. Reason: grammar correction
Monk--do you have any contacts in SC that can get me an official press release or some kind of documentation that I can get to our Wildlife folks. I'll look online, but if you know of anything, please pass it along. I was told by our folks that cormorants are migratory birds and thus a Federal issue and not a state one. If SC can get permission, we should work on it as well.
Thanks Monk--I found the article. The key is the paragraph I put in bold and red. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife gave the permission to SC DNR to kill the cormorants. Let me see what I can do with the NC Wildlife.
DNR begins program for removal of double-crested cormorants from Santee Cooper lakes
The S.C. Department of Natural Resources (DNR) will conduct two training sessions to qualify interested persons for the legal taking of double-crested cormorants from the Santee Cooper lakes. The training sessions are scheduled for Tuesday, January 7, 2014 beginning at 6 p.m. and Saturday, February 8th beginning at 2 p.m. Both training sessions will be held at the Santee Cooper Auditorium located at Santee Cooper headquarters at 1 Riverwood Drive, Moncks Corner, SC. Persons wishing to participate in the Santee Cooper cormorant removal program will be required to attend one of the two training sessions, complete an application and a DNR Volunteer Form. Pre-registration is not required.
The training will emphasize safety, area of action, species identification, weapon restrictions and program dates and hours. After participating in the training session, a permit will be issued to take double-crested cormorants. Only those that attend one complete training session will be granted a permit. All participants in the removal program will be required to have both a permit and valid South Carolina hunting license at all times during removal activities.Double-crested cormorant
DNR is authorized by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service to designate agents for this action under the Depredation Order for Double-crested Cormorants to Protect Public Resources.
The effects of migrant cormorants that winter on the Santee Cooper Lakes include competition with the resident fish population for clupeid (herrings, shads, menhaden, etc.) forage, direct predation on out-migrating anadromous juvenile shad and herring, direct predation on returning anadromous adults while crowded below the System's dams, and direct predation on juvenile game fish and catfish. In addition, cormorant harassment has been linked to significant winter kills of adult redear sunfish too large to swallow. Permanent damage to flooded bald cypress and tupelo trees used for roosts has also been documented.
The taking of double-crested cormorants will be restricted to the legal boundaries of the Santee Cooper lakes and will be allowed only in areas where waterfowl hunters can legally hunt waterfowl. Double-crested cormorants may be taken beginning on February 2, 2014 through March 31, 2014. The legal hours for taking these birds begins 30 minutes before sunrise and ends 30 minutes after sunset. These birds are protected under the Federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act and State Laws and the taking of them or similar species without a permit or by methods, or in areas, not prescribed by permit is strictly prohibited.