US Fish and Wildlife Service has issued their 2011 Waterfowl Population Status Report.
Here is the link and a few exerts..........I'm not 100% sure, but the way I read it duck numbers in Washington this fall may be down. Canada Geese, Snow Geese and Brant numbers look good.
http://www.flyways.us/sites/default/files/uploads/statusreport2011_final.pdfWrangel Island Snow Geese
Biologists report that
snowmelt and nesting phenology were average
to slightly later than average. Preliminary estimates
from Wrangel Island's Tundra River
colony included a spring population of approximately
140,000 adults, down slightly relative to
last year. However good weather conditions and
a very large colony size were reported, so improved
production is expected compared to last
year's very poor production. Increased fox activity
was noted, but well below historic levels. Estimates
of the Wrangel Island spring population
have increased an average of 3% per year since
2002 (P < 0:001). A near-average fall
flight is expected in 2011.
Brant
Western High Arctic Brant (WHA)
This population of brant nests on the Parry
Islands of the Northwest Territories (Figure 17).
The population stages in fall at Izembek Lagoon,
Alaska. They predominantly winter in the
Padilla, Samish, and Fidalgo Bays of Washington
and near Boundary Bay, British Columbia,
although some individuals have been observed
as far south as Mexico. This population is monitored
during the MWS in three Washington
state counties. During the 2011 MWS, 8,500
brant were counted, 42% more than in 2010.
These estimates have increased an average of 2%
per year during 2002{2011 (P = 0:538). As in
2010, satellite imagery indicated very little snow
cover on the Parry Islands during spring of 2011
which is consistent with an expectation for
excellent brant production.