State biologist Ed Reed says moose population boom hasn't happened yet
Aerial surveys don't show great increase in numbers
nydailynews.com
The Associated Press
JIM LAVRAKAS/AP
Biologist spotted seven moose in aerial surveys.
RAY BROOK, N.Y.— A biologist with the state Department of Environmental Conservation says the Adirondack moose population explosion just hasn't happened yet.
Biologists haven't seen a great increase in moose numbers since they started doing aerial surveys in 2007, Ed Reed from the DEC told the Adirondack Daily Enterprise.
There were two aerial surveys this winter concentrating on a 77-square-mile area just south of Upper Chateaugay Lake, which Reed said has probably the highest moose density in the state.
Biologists spotted seven moose.
Biologists haven't seen a great increase in moose numbers since they started doing aerial surveys in 2007, Ed Reed from the DEC told the Adirondack Daily Enterprise.
There were two aerial surveys this winter concentrating on a 77-square-mile area just south of Upper Chateaugay Lake, which Reed said has probably the highest moose density in the state.
Biologists spotted seven moose.
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