by Ericdc » Fri Jan 23, 2026 3:34 pm
Ducks still come to Louisiana, but they hang tight to quality habitat and managed pressure.
Southwest Louisiana – 1,947,000
Flooded habitat in the region appeared to have increased substantially, due mostly to
increases in flooding of crawfish ponds in the agricultural portion. The duck estimate for southwest
Louisiana (transect lines 1-17; Figure 4) is 73% higher than the December estimate (1.12 million)
and 1% higher than January 2025 (1.92 million). It is 41% higher than the most recent 5-year
January average for SW, and 37% higher than the most recent 10-year average (Figure 3). Similar
to December, more than 75% of ducks observed were in eastern Cameron and western Vermilion
Parishes in marshes and rice fields near Lacassine NWR, Rockefeller refuge, Creole, Grand
Chenier, Gueydan, and the Pecan Island area. Geese were not surveyed during the transect survey of
ducks. Rather, a cruise survey was conducted the following week. South of Hwy. 190 and west of
the Atchafalaya basin a total of 183,195 light geese and 7,213 white-fronted geese were observed.
An additional 8,000 white-fronted and 82,000 light geese were counted south of 31°N in Pointe
Coupee, St. Landry, Evangeline, and southern Avoyelles Parishes, though very few geese or ducks
were observed in Evangeline Parish.
The January survey of northeast Louisiana was conducted January 6-14, 2026 via 1,954
miles of transects. The December survey was cancelled due to plane/weather issues. The last
transect survey that took place was during January 2024, which will be used to compare 2026
result. Recall that historical surveys were conducted as cruise surveys and cannot be used to
compare with transect survey estimates.
A total of 671,000 ducks were estimated, which is approximately 43% higher than the
January 2024 survey of 471,000 ducks and a 248% increase from January 2023’s survey.
Dabblers constituted 85% of ducks counted, with divers the remaining 15%. Northern pintail
(22%), northern shoveler (20%), gadwall (18%), and green-winged teal (12%) made up the
Species Count
Mallard 75,000
Gadwall 118,000
A. Wigeon *
GW Teal 79,000
BW Teal 13,000
Shoveler 134,000
Pintail 148,000
Total Dabblers 567,000
Scaup *
Ring-necked 48,000
Canvasback 49,000
Ruddy Duck *
Total Divers 97,000
Wood Ducks 7,000
Total Ducks 671,000
Coots 13,000
Canada Goose *
White-fronted Goose 6,000
Snow Goose 757,000
Total Geese 763,000
Total Waterfowl 1,447,000
majority of December’s survey. Mallards (75,000) were down slightly from the 2024 count of
90,000.
All observable geese, whether on or off transect, were estimated opportunistically during
the course of the survey. An estimated 763,000 geese were observed which consisted of 6,000
white-fronted geese and 757,000 light geese (Ross’ and lesser snow geese). The goose count is
233% higher than January 2024. Most flocks were small (1-5 thousand) and disbursed on the
landscape. The largest concentration of geese was observed on three roost ponds in southern
Richland Parish. An estimated 700,000 light geese, this concentration contributed most of the
region’s goose estimate.
Habitat conditions throughout northeast Louisiana have been poor throughout fall-winter.
Most areas of region are dry, with less than 5% of fields flooded. Private lands in the Saline,
Ferriday/Vidalia, Tallulah, Oak Grove, and Tensas areas had very few wetland complexes
available. Northern Avoyelles, southern Catahoula Parish, and areas along the Ouachita River
from Columbia to Monroe held most of the birds counted during this survey. In conclusion, a
dry winter with little to no backwater flooding, resulted in many isolated wetlands on a larger
landscape of bare ground and woodland. These areas did not hold waterfowl as well as larger
wetland complexes where, regionally, 10-40% of the landscape is flooded.