SPECIES

Ontario has built a solid reputation for conserving and encouraging its game populations, while also increasing hunting opportunities. Systems of selective harvesting and tagging, which control the taking of certain animals, have established solid numbers of popular species, like those outlined below. Hunter education programs have also been successful in instilling a sense of respect for the environment, the quarry, other hunters and non-hunters, and how to hunt safely.

Take a moment to learn about some of Ontario’s huntable species, and how and why conservation efforts make the possibilities and challenges of hunting limitless.

Black Bear

Black Bear

Black bears hold a special position in both the hearts and the ecosystem of Ontario. It’s no surprise that their populations are guarded so carefully through measures of adaptive management and selective harvesting. Current populations are estimated at 100,000 animals, one of the largest populations in North America.
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Moose

Moose

In Ontario, moose populations are controlled through strict selective harvest programs that limit the taking of animals with high reproductive potential. The result: a population of moose in huntable areas estimated at about 99,000 – with an additional 15,000 in remote and protected areas.
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White-Tailed Deer

White-Tailed Deer

While they undoubtedly provide a satisfying challenge for the hunter, white-tailed deer are also to be appreciated within their natural context. Conservation efforts for white-tailed deer ensure the populations in Ontario are maintained between roughly 350,000 and 400,000 animals.
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Grouse

Grouse

Various types of grouse, from the popular ruffed grouse to the spruce grouse, live across Ontario. The ruffed grouse exists in greatest abundance, roosting clear across the Province to the tip of James Bay. There is ample time in the hunting seasons for upland birds.
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Wild Turkey

Wild Turkey

Conservationists and wildlife experts captured a few hundred wild turkeys in the United States and redistributed them in Ontario habitats in the mid-1980s. Measures of selective harvesting and hunter education have since proven fruitful: according to wildlife management experts, our provincial population of Wild Turkey now hovers around 80,000 birds in the Southern Ontario region.
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Waterfowl

Waterfowl

Ontario has been a waterfowler’s hotspot in North America for more than a decade. Hunters can be assured that the harvesting limits for both duck and goose are generous.
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