North Dakota hunters shoot more grouse, pheasants and partridges in 2020

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The overall harvest likely was driven by increased production of upland birds and favorable weather conditions for hunters, said R.J. Gross, upland game biologist for the North Dakota Game and Fish Department in Bismarck.Written By:Brad Dokken|4:42 pm, Aug. 11, 2021

    More people hunted pheasants, sharptails and Hungarian partridges during the fall of 2020 in North Dakota, and they shot more birds, the Game and Fish Department said. (Contributed/ North Dakota Game and Fish Department)

    More people hunted pheasants, sharptails and Hungarian partridges during the fall of 2020 in North Dakota, and they shot more birds, the Game and Fish Department said. (Contributed/ North Dakota Game and Fish Department)

    More hunters went afield last fall in North Dakota, and they shot more pheasants, sharp-tailed grouse and Hungarian partridges than in 2019, the Game and Fish Department said this week in reporting results from hunter harvest surveys.

    The overall harvest likely was driven by increased production of upland birds and favorable weather conditions for hunters, said R.J. Gross, upland game biologist for Game and Fish in Bismarck.

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