An urban turkey is released into its new rural habitat in central Wyoming with help from volunteers from a local school. The turkey was one of more than 100 birds captured near Casper and relocated by the Wyoming Game and Fish Department. (Brandon Werner/Wyoming Game and Fish Department)
Share this:

Wild turkeys can be unruly neighbors. They poop all over the place, damage trees with their sharp claws, hold up traffic and are known to bully dogs, children and the occasional mail carrier. 

That was part of the motivation behind a recent Wyoming Game and Fish Department project that trapped 137 birds around Casper this winter and relocated them to rural sites in Natrona and Converse counties, where habitat is recovering from drought and severe winter weather. 

In urban areas with large yards, a drop net was used to catch turkeys. (Wyoming Game and Fish Department)

“Now that the habitat is coming back, these relocated birds will have a chance to re-establish and expand their population,” Joan Eisemann, National Wild Turkey Federation’s Wyoming State Chapter president, said in a press release. The federation aided the project by purchasing small specialized box traps used to capture the birds. 

Federation volunteers also helped with capture, transport and release. Wildlife management students from Casper College joined to get a hands-on learning experience, and a kindergarten class from a rural community also helped release the birds.

According to Wyoming Game and Fish Public Information Specialist Janet Milek, the project set out to trap and relocate wild turkeys in high concentrations around Casper. Relocation helps reduce conflicts with humans or pets, and bolsters rural wild turkey populations, she said. 

The work entailed setting up box traps as well as drop nets — which were used to gather large flocks of birds on bigger properties — in areas heavily used by turkeys before transporting the birds to their new homes. 

The National Wild Turkey Federation donated money towards the purchase of small box traps used to capture live urban wild turkeys before they were relocated. (Wyoming Game and Fish Department)

“Optimal wild turkey habitats encompass areas with suitable roost trees (e.g., cottonwood, Douglas fir, ponderosa pine) and food sources like seeds, grains, insects, and other hard and soft mast,” Milek wrote in an email. “These needs are often met in grain fields, rangelands, and ponderosa pine galleries with diverse understories. Riparian areas also provide ideal habitat conditions. With their typically mild winters, Central and Eastern Wyoming are particularly favorable for turkey populations as harsh winters limit their survival.”

Along with ending human-wildlife conflicts, the federation said, the intent is to strengthen wild turkey populations to create new and better bird hunting opportunities.

Katie Klingsporn reports on outdoor recreation, public lands, education and general news for WyoFile. She’s been a journalist and editor covering the American West for 20 years. Her freelance work has...

Join the Conversation

1 Comment

WyoFile's goal is to provide readers with information and ideas that foster constructive conversations about the issues and opportunities our communities face. One small piece of how we do that is by offering a space below each story for readers to share perspectives, experiences and insights. For this to work, we need your help.

What we're looking for: 

  • Your real name — first and last. 
  • Direct responses to the article. Tell us how your experience relates to the story.
  • The truth. Share factual information that adds context to the reporting.
  • Thoughtful answers to questions raised by the reporting or other commenters.
  • Tips that could advance our reporting on the topic.
  • No more than three comments per story, including replies. 

What we block from our comments section, when we see it:

  • Pseudonyms. WyoFile stands behind everything we publish, and we expect commenters to do the same by using their real name.
  • Comments that are not directly relevant to the article. 
  • Demonstrably false claims, what-about-isms, references to debunked lines of rhetoric, professional political talking points or links to sites trafficking in misinformation.
  • Personal attacks, profanity, discriminatory language or threats.
  • Arguments with other commenters.

Other important things to know: 

  • Appearing in WyoFile’s comments section is a privilege, not a right or entitlement. 
  • We’re a small team and our first priority is reporting. Depending on what’s going on, comments may be moderated 24 to 48 hours from when they’re submitted — or even later. If you comment in the evening or on the weekend, please be patient. We’ll get to it when we’re back in the office.
  • We’re not interested in managing squeaky wheels, and even if we wanted to, we don't have time to address every single commenter’s grievance. 
  • Try as we might, we will make mistakes. We’ll fail to catch aliases, mistakenly allow folks to exceed the comment limit and occasionally miss false statements. If that’s going to upset you, it’s probably best to just stick with our journalism and avoid the comments section.
  • We don’t mediate disputes between commenters. If you have concerns about another commenter, please don’t bring them to us.

The bottom line:

If you repeatedly push the boundaries, make unreasonable demands, get caught lying or generally cause trouble, we will stop approving your comments — maybe forever. Such moderation decisions are not negotiable or subject to explanation. If civil and constructive conversation is not your goal, then our comments section is not for you. 

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  1. Awesome. This absolutely is the correct way to address the over population problem. There is one down side, I was overrun with grasshoppers this last year and one family of turkeys devoured them daily in my neighborhood – could have used a dozen more – much better than spraying toxic chemicals.