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AR15.COM
2/3/2009 12:10:44 PM EDT
I've found they are extrememly fun game animals. So much action. Almost like duck hunting if your in the right spots. The average population is 56 animals per acre here in Oregon and the next state under us is Lousiana at 18 animals per acre. We have been walking the banks of ponds and canals that border farming land. They seem to go out into the middle of the fields close to dark which is really nice. We have been using a .22 WMR and a .410 shotgun to keep things quiet, yet effective.

Any1 else having fun slaying these things?

We're going out again tonight so check back, I'll snap a few pictures
2/3/2009 3:45:59 PM EDT
[#1]
Soob, do I need to say it? This thread is useless without pics!

I have shot some nutria with my cousin in New Mexico - they are freakin huge! Wish I had taken some pics, it was like 10 years ago when I was a teenager. At the time we were using a .30-06 - it caused some damge, to be sure.
2/3/2009 6:58:17 PM EDT
[#2]
I've been really wanting to go nutria hunting, and I see them all the time out in the damp fields here in the Willamette Valley, but I don't know anyone who's got property to go on. Where are you going?

Are you serious: 58 of those buggers per acre?
2/4/2009 6:56:31 AM EDT
[#3]
I guess since im from up in Michigan i have no clue what that is, could you explain and show pics.
2/4/2009 7:33:41 AM EDT
[#5]
^    Looks like a Sat. night for teenagers out west....Except the ears are longer....
2/4/2009 7:49:12 AM EDT
[#6]
I had no idea they were so numerous up there.

Thought we had a monopoly...

crock pot nutria
2/4/2009 7:49:57 AM EDT
[#7]
tap tap
2/4/2009 9:00:52 AM EDT
[#8]
LOL thats funny its hard to see um but if i were to guess i would call um a muskrat up here.
2/4/2009 11:53:57 AM EDT
[#9]
They were brought over here from Europe for their pelts and then the population got out of control. My dad said back in the day they used to get $6 a pelt but now I see them on the net for $50-100 each.

Last night we went out again and got about 4-6 more. We have a few spots that are %100. We usualy give it about a hour rest at each spot. We shoot them while there swimming and they die out in the middle of the pond/canal so it was hard to snap a pic with my cell phone. I got one in a field the night before last. We are goin out again tonight for the 4th time in a row because well, this is way too much fun. I want to skin one and keep the pelt so I'll post pics if that happens.

regardless I'll make sure to snap a pic of the canal and whatnot where we are shooting them.


Detailed Nutria Info for Oregon <-.PDF file

"Nutria densities vary greatly. In Louisiana, autumn densities of about 18 animals per acre (44/ha) have been found in floating freshwater marshes. In Oregon, summer densities in freshwater marshes may be 56 animals per acre (138/ha). Sex ratios range from 0.6 to 1.6 males per female. "

Referance to this comment

2/4/2009 12:45:09 PM EDT
[#10]
I never even heard of them before.
2/4/2009 12:49:28 PM EDT
[#11]
Like i said before i'm pretty sure its a muskrat
2/4/2009 12:57:23 PM EDT
[#12]

Nutria grow to 2ft. and 20lbs. That's about 3X the size of a muskrat.



2/4/2009 1:41:22 PM EDT
[#13]
I live in mid Michigan we have Dow Chemical com. up here anything is possible if it lives by that place.
2/5/2009 6:27:30 AM EDT
[#14]
It's a nutria, not a muskrat. Read the .pdf. They were brought over here for their pelts and then the farms all closed thus releasing them into the wild. Oregon and Lousiana are the only 2 states in the US I know that have them but I wouldn't be surprised to hear different.

Last night we only ran into about 10 and in groups of 2 to 4 so it wasn't that great. We had whored this spot out to the point they saw us in a distance and would make a dead sprint off into their holes. I shot into a group of 3 with a 22mag but not sure if I killed it cuz it went into the hole. I heard the thump of the pelt when the bullet hit though. Forgot to take a picture, sry bout that... I'm not gonna go out there again until sat or sun so I'll do it then
2/9/2009 10:38:10 AM EDT
[#15]
We have them here in SE Texas, lots of Rice Farming and Marsh land, they fit right in. Not as many as you guys but they are here.
2/22/2009 9:04:50 PM EDT
[#16]
What part of oregon are you in?  I'm in Eugene.  All the nutria I ever see are within the city limits or in parks.  GRRRRRR!!!!!
2/22/2009 9:34:25 PM EDT
[#17]
Quoted:
I've been really wanting to go nutria hunting, and I see them all the time out in the damp fields here in the Willamette Valley, but I don't know anyone who's got property to go on. Where are you going?

Are you serious: 58 of those buggers per acre?


+1
2/23/2009 5:54:46 AM EDT
[#18]
Quoted:
Quoted:
I've been really wanting to go nutria hunting, and I see them all the time out in the damp fields here in the Willamette Valley, but I don't know anyone who's got property to go on. Where are you going?

Are you serious: 58 of those buggers per acre?


+1


My demented, yet artistic eye tells me that a dead nutria juxtaposed with my GSG-5 would make a great photo for my office.
2/25/2009 12:45:59 PM EDT
[#19]
Quoted:
What part of oregon are you in?  I'm in Eugene.  All the nutria I ever see are within the city limits or in parks.  GRRRRRR!!!!!


We're getting them just around the outskirts of eugene, about 5mi from city limits. Between coburg and harrisburg specificaly. outskirts of JC too.
4/1/2009 4:53:46 PM EDT
[#20]
I've been looking for a area to hunt in Louisiana.  So far, no luck.
4/1/2009 8:37:19 PM EDT
[#21]
Lots of fun for the AK and the AR. Need the 30 round mags...unless you got 40's !!
4/1/2009 8:55:58 PM EDT
[#22]
i use to hunt these as a kid in beaumont texas. i think we got like 20 something a pelt back in the back.......btw they can be pretty mean.
4/1/2009 10:16:40 PM EDT
[#23]
Cool!

Nutria are NATIVE TO SOUTH AMERICA...HUGE RATS...Tasty too.

anyways.



Nutria Population Dynamics – A Timeline

1930s –

Imported from fur farms, nutria were released, either intentionally or accidentally, in the Louisiana marshes in the 1930s, and soon after, feral populations were established near the Gulf Coast. Nutria continued to expand their range from there as they were trapped and transplanted into marshes from Port Arthur, Texas to the Mississippi River in 1941. Later that year, a hurricane further dispersed nutria populations in southeast Texas and southwest Louisiana.

Late 1940s –

In the late 1940s, nutria were promoted as biological agents for controlling aquatic weeds, primarily water hyacinth, and were transplanted throughout southeastern Louisiana. Rapid population growth followed for several years thereafter. Annual pelt harvest records and damage reports were the primary source of information on population dynamics at that time.

Mid-1950s –

At this time, reports started coming in describing the damage done to marshes, rice and sugarcane fields, and levee systems, as nutria populations soared to 20 million animals. Biologists described areas where nutria had completely denuded natural levees at the mouth of the Mississippi River. The marsh had been weakened by severe over-grazing, and in 1957, Hurricane Audrey hit southwestern Louisiana. Its storm surge further weakened the marsh as a huge wave of seawater pushed thousands of nutria inland, accelerating the rate at which the animals spread. Soon after, reports of agricultural damage increased, and in 1958 nutria were taken off the list of protected wildlife.

1960s to 1980s –

As the state promoted nutria fur as a natural resource, efforts to manage nutria as a pest began to compete with the growing fur industry. In 1965, the nutria was returned to the protected wildlife list. From 1962 to 1982, 1.3 million nutria were harvested annually for their fur from the coastal marshes. Reports of nutria damage declined substantially, and periodic severe weather helped to reduce populations.

Mid-1980s –

The international fur market began to shrink during the mid-1980s, and, as a result, harvest levels substantially declined. Reports of significant nutria damage to the wetlands began coming from coastal land managers during the 1987-88 harvest season, which had been dramatically less productive than previous years due to the declining fur trade and stock market crash of 1987. Aerial surveys in 1988 confirmed damage was occurring, particularly of the southeastern marshes.

1990s –

In the 1990-91 harvest season, only 134,000 nutria were harvested. Aerial wetland damage surveys began in earnest in 1993 and were conducted again in 1995, 1996, 1998-2002. Survey results clearly show that nutria damage in recent years is concentrated in the Deltaic Plain in southeastern Louisiana. This indicates high nutria populations that are exceeding the local carrying capacity.

2000 –

In 2000, the U.S. Congress passed an appropriation to address Brown Marsh Dieback and to provide funds for a number of research studies on nutria. The Coastal Wetlands Planning, Protection, and Restoration Act, also known as the Breaux Act, has provided grant funding for coastal restoration and conservation. In 2002, a final report on Nutria Control Methods was completed by Genesis Laboratories under contract by the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources. After reviewing a number of possible methods to reduce nutria, the report concludes that the incentive payment program is the best option for coast-wide control. The report confirms the method advocated by the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries. This program was put in place when the trapping season opened in November 2002.