Hunters instructed to extract moose and bear teeth - Action News
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New Brunswick

Hunters instructed to extract moose and bear teeth

Big-game hunting has takena sharp twist in New Brunswick this year.

Teeth will help officials better understand moose and bear populations in the province

Tracey, left, and Joel Paget shot a moose in Zone 6, the Grand Falls and Plaster Rock area, last week. (Tracey Paget/Submitted)

Big-game hunting has takena sharp twist in New Brunswick this year.

Starting this month,hunters who are registering their animals using the new online process introduced this season, will need to extract a tooth from the moose or bear they harvest, and bring it to the nearest Department of Natural Resources and Energy Development office.

"We expect some growing pains with it," said Dwayne Sabine, a biologist with the department.

Before this year, harvest registration only occurred at in-person registration stations, which remains an option for hunters who don't want to remove a tooth ortake the measurements themselves.

The teeth will providedata on moose and bear and howhealthy they are. They will also help officials understand a lot more about the population growth of these animals.

Moose hunting season was last week, and bear hunting season is underway now and lasts until November.

Teeth age with layers

The goal is to make sure New Brunswick's big game species are part of the province's natural heritage for years to come.

Sabine said the way a toothages is similar to what happens with a tree, in that tooth alsohas rings on the inside.

The process of determining the age isn't as simple as cutting a tree and examining its annual rings on the wood

The tooth "puts on a new layer every year, but it's very, very thin," Sabine said.

Tracey Paget said he wouldn't have been able to get his moose this season without his son, Joel, who also performed the tooth extraction. (Tracey Paget/Submitted)

Microscopic equipment is used on the tooth to determine the age range of the animal. Then the tooth is sent to a lab to determine the exact age of the animal.

The animals are considered long-lived species. A bear can live up to 30 years, and a moose up to 20 years.

Tooth extractions have been happening in the province for years. But this is the first year hunters will need to do the extraction themselves.

'An easy process'

Tracey Paget got a moose last week with his son Joel, who extracted one of the animal's left side teeth with a knife and pliers.

"He didn't have any trouble," Paget said on Facebook messenger.

The Pagetsdropped the toothoff at the Department of Natural Resources office.

"It's an easy process," the father said. "You have 14 days to get it to them."

The province has posted instructions on how to cut the tooth from a bear or moose on its website.

The province shows an image of how to cut out a tooth in a bear or moose. (Province of New Brunswick website)

The hardest part will be trying to find the right tooth.

"I'm sure people look in the mouth and there's quite a few teeth there," he said. "Which one's the right one to pull?"

If hunters who choose to register their animals online fail tobring a tooth in, they won't be eligible to apply to the following year's resident moose hunting licencedraw.

The draw usuallyhas about 60,000 applicants. Sabine hopes this will be enough incentive for hunters.

"That tooth is quite important for our management process."

With files from Information Morning Fredericton