Evanenko Waterfowl Production Area
- Lake name:
- Evanenko Waterfowl Production Area
- Location:
- North Dakota
- Latitude:
- 47.719509
- Longitude:
- -100.733402
- Management agency:
- North Dakota Game and Fish Department
- Comments:
- Not much information on this lake.
Summary of Surveys (2)
Survey Citation:
Drilling. N. E. 2015. North Dakota Colonial and Semi-colonial Waterbird Inventory, 2014-2015. Final Report. Tech. Rpt. SC-NDCWB02. Bird Conservancy of the Rockies, Brighton, CO, USA. 57 pp.
-
Type
shore; boat; air -
Time period
2014 or 2015 -
Source
Report -
Both Western and Clarks?
N
Count Type | Range | Max | Year |
---|---|---|---|
Max Adults | 1 to 100 | 60 | 2014 or 2015 |
Most Recent Adults | 1 to 100 | 60 | 2014 or 2015 |
Max Nests | 1 to 100 | 51 avg for county | 2014 or 2015 |
Most Recent Nests | 1 to 100 | 51 avg for county | 2014 or 2015 |
Max Chicks | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Most Recent Chicks | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Comments:
Survey methods are generalized across the different grebe breeding lakes because they were not specified per lake but an aerial survey was initially conducted. Survey was at least once in 2014 or 2015 with no further detail on each lake. Grebe breeding pair totals per county and per lake is reported. Entered is the grebe breeding pair total per breeding lake X2 for an estimation of adults numbers. Average colony size for McLean County is entered but no nest numbers per breeding lake is reported.
Survey Citation:
Igl, L. 2023. Pers. comm.
-
Time period
N/A -
Source
Personal communication -
Both Western and Clarks?
N
Count Type | Range | Max | Year |
---|---|---|---|
Max Adults | 1 to 100 | presence | ? |
Most Recent Adults | 1 to 100 | presence | ? |
Max Nests | 1 to 100 | presence | ? |
Most Recent Nests | 1 to 100 | presence | ? |
Max Chicks | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Most Recent Chicks | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Comments:
Larry Igl confirms that Western grebe (or Western and Clark's grebe) colonies were at this lake in the past. No years nor further details or whether grebes still breed there. Larry believes that there are probably more ND lakes than is listed here that support grebe colonies.