
By Nick Simonson
Last year’s tallies in the North Dakota summer upland bird roadside survey were a telling portent for the fall hunting seasons, as drops in numbers – from slight downward ticks in pheasant counts to bigger ones for grouse and partridge – reflected the changes hunters saw in the field almost exactly. Overall, hunters harvested three percent fewer pheasants, 24 percent fewer sharptailed grouse, and 25 percent fewer Hungarian partridge in the fall of 2025 compared to the season before, but such a decline wasn’t unexpected, according to RJ Gross, Upland Game Biologist with the North Dakota Game & Fish Department (NDG&F).
“It’s kind of crazy, they pretty much mirrored what our late summer roadside counts were,” Gross stated of pheasant harvest numbers in 2025, adding, “everything was down. Pheasant was down three percent, which was the same as what it was in our late summer roadside counts. We figured it would be down, just because production wasn’t as good last year.”
The primary driver for the lower numbers was the lack of recruitment, resulting from a challenging spring and early summer which is the key nesting and brood rearing portion of the birds’ year. A number of severe weather events, which included significant hail, high winds, heavy rains and tornadoes, likely hurt early survival rates of pheasant chicks. The population was buoyed, however, by strong overwinter survival of adult roosters, which hunters found more of in the field last year.
“Last summer we had a lot of severe weather, tornadoes, hail, downpours in late May. I think we had seven or eight inches of rain in one event, that just doesn’t bode well for nest success, but I think harvest was boosted more than it should have been because of such good overwinter survival. We’ve had three back-to-back-to-back really good winters, so there’s a lot of older roosters that are out there. But coming back to why it’s down, 75 percent of our harvest is juveniles, so with less juveniles, obviously it’s going to be down a bit,” Gross explains.
In addition to those tougher rearing conditions, sharptailed grouse likely had a tough time due to an increase of both avian influenza and west nile virus on the landscape. The native upland birds are susceptible to both diseases, and with an albeit small sample size, agency biologists like Gross were able to determine that roughly 25 percent of the birds they took blood draws from had antibodies for at least one of the diseases, suggesting a more widespread presence in the population last year. This likely added to the decline in grouse numbers observed and harvested by hunters last fall. Both infections fluctuate seasonally, and tend to ebb and flow from year to year, so it is possible that their presence won’t be as high in 2026.
Despite these downturns, Gross is optimistic with the recent change in the weather just in time for nesting season, which typically runs from the middle of May with a peak hatch period for pheasants happening in the middle of June. Recent warm temperatures, stable conditions, and lack of any severe weather coming out of a cooler early spring can only help hen pheasants in the nesting process as they incubate their eggs. Then after they hatch, the warmth will help those young chicks through the first few tenuous days of life, when cold, damp conditions can increase mortality.
“With the warm coming up, the lows at night are going to be the big thing. When they hatch, they can’t thermoregulate their own body temperature for 10 days, pretty much. When it gets down below that 45 degrees, they don’t last very long. So, this warm weather is good, this will keep everything growing, the vegetation will grow up really nice. We need to keep getting that rain so we can have bugs. We don’t like bugs as humans, but for an upland game bird, those bugs the first couple weeks of their life, that’s all they eat and that’s what gives us a good juvenile harvest in the fall,” Gross details of pheasant chicks’ early needs.
Gross and other NDG&F agents are currently conducting spring crowing counts through June 10 to determine the overwinter survival of rooster pheasants. Then, from July 20 through the end of August, they will conduct roadside surveys once again to determine the number of young-of-the-year and adult birds on the landscape. This year’s partridge and grouse season is slated to start Sept. 12, with the general pheasant opener planned for Oct. 10, with dates to be finalized in summer.
Simonson is the lead writer and editor of Dakota Edge Outdoors.
Featured Photo: The recent warm up will assist pheasant hens in their incubation efforts, and will also help chicks survive after hatch, when they are most vulnerable to cold conditions due to limited feathering. Simonson Photo.
