01/06/2026
Happy New Year! We flew the first waterfowl survey of 2026 on Friday, January 2, 2026. Duck abundance was slightly lower than the long-term average on the Illinois (-4%) but greater than LTA on the Mississippi river (+33%) this week. Mallard abundance was greater than LTA on both rivers this week, +19% and a whopping +60% on the Illinois and central Mississippi, respectively. As the ice coverage persists, mallards continue to be the most abundant. Indeed, 90% of the observed ducks observed in the IRV were mallards, while that comparison was 72% for the central Mississippi this week. Those mallard estimates this week are ~225,000 mallards on the MS river, and ~82,000 in the IRV. Notably, almost every other species was below LTA in our survey area this week. The consistent ice coverage combined with the early snow seems to have moved most non-mallards out of our region.
A much used photo, but still my favorite. Something I haven't done lately is to highlight the history of our survey. This will be a longer one...
In the fall of 1938 Dr. Frank C. Bellrose began traveling by car and boat with binoculars and a spotting scope to record waterfowl abundance from various vantage points in the Illinois River valley. Bellrose initiated experimental aerial inventories in the fall of 1946, when pilots, planes, and fuel became available after World War 2. He noted that the time required to inventory the Illinois Valley was reduced from a week to a day and that a large part of the Mississippi Valley could be included in the one-day flight. Frank began consistently surveying waterfowl from the air in 1948, and this is what we consider the beginning of our dataset.
Approximately 214 miles of the Illinois River, from Hennepin to Grafton, and 272 miles of the central Mississippi River, from Grafton to Muscatine, are aerially inventoried for waterfowl weekly from September through early January.
The purpose of these aerial surveys is not to acquire complete counts of waterfowl within specific geographic areas but to estimate the number of each species in order to provide an index of temporal changes within and among years and to document the distribution and abundance of species throughout our region. An added benefit of the inventory is to provide information to refuge managers and waterfowl hunters along both rivers. This information aids in conservation planning and delivery at critical habitat along the Illinois corridor of the MS Flyway. Because of the efforts of the INHS with the long-term support of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, the annual inventory data on numbers and distribution of migratory waterfowl in Illinois is unequaled.
We aerially inventory 23 locations on the Illinois River and 18 locations on the central Mississippi River weekly. Flights are generally scheduled for the earliest "good weather" day of the week beginning in early September and lasting until mid-January. Once a flight is completed, we post results as soon as possible.
We start the inventory shortly after sunrise from the Pekin, IL area and head south counting waterfowl areas all the way to the confluence of the Illinois and Mississippi River near Grafton. From Grafton, we head up the Mississippi River counting refuges in Illinois and Missouri and arrive at the Quincy, IL airport sometime between 11:00 AM and noon. After refueling the airplane and grabbing some lunch, we proceed up the Mississippi River to the Port Louisa Refuge near the Pool 17 Dam. We then fly east, back to the Illinois River and resume counting waterfowl at Hennepin and proceed south and finish counting ducks at the McClugage Bridge at the narrows of Upper Peoria Lake and Lower Peoria Lake.
The long term nature of the inventory and consistency of survey methods over the years adds to the strength of this data. We count the same locations, week after week, year after year, at approximately the same time of day, by a limited number of observers. In fact, there have only been 5 observers over the 76 years of aerial inventories. Bellrose was the observer until 1970, Tud Crompton took over until 1989, Michelle Horath flew until 2004, and Aaron Yetter took over in 2005. I took the reins in 2021, a responsibility I do not take lightly.
Our data has been used to conduct peer-refereed research, aid in conservation planning, inform season structures, target areas of value during various field work, among many other things. The survey and it's observers have been witness to the decline of duck populations and the ever-continuing efforts to bring them back.
For this week's numbers and more information about the survey, see the website link in our bio...