Moose Hunting Calls App
iOS Universel / Sports
Moose Hunting Calls is an app with various high quality moose calls. Get hunting calls and harvest a productive season.
App features:
1. Favoriting
2. Multiple repeat options
3. Detailed info about moose
4. Works offline
5. Works even when device is locked
6. Remote controls of the moose sound from lock screen.
Available moose sounds:
1. Charolais Bull Warning
2. Female Mating Call 1
3. Female Mating Call 2
4. Moose 1
5. Moose 2
6. Moose 3
7. Moose 4
8. Moose Grunt 1
9. Moose Grunt 2
10. Moose-Bull
DESCRIPTION
Moose are the largest members of the deer family, standing six feet (1.8 meters) tall from hoof to shoulder, and weighing in at more than 1,000 pounds (450 kilograms). Each of their light to dark brown hairs is hollow, and the air trapped inside provides insulation. A flap of skin called a dewlap hangs from the throat. Males are distinguished from females by their antlers, which grow up to six feet across.
RANGE
Moose are found in the northern regions of the United States, from Maine to Washington, throughout Canada, and into Alaska. Due to their large size and insulating fur, moose are limited to cold climates. Forested areas with streams and ponds are ideal moose habitat.
Adult moose use their antlers or hooves to defend themselves from predators like bears and wolves. The much smaller calves are easier for predators to take down, and many of them fall victim to predation before reaching their first birthday. Moose also suffer from a predator of another sort, parasitic brain worms. White-tailed deer are carriers of the parasite, but it has no effect on them. When deer defecate, the brain worms are transferred from their waste to land snails. When moose unknowingly eat the snails while foraging for food, they ingest the parasite.
DIET
Moose are herbivores. The word “moose” is an Algonquin term meaning “eater of twigs.” Moose are so tall that they have difficulty bending down to eat grasses, so they prefer to feed on leaves, bark, and twigs from trees and shrubs. Their favorite foods come from native willow, aspen, and balsam fir trees. They also munch on aquatic plants from streams and ponds.
LIFE HISTORY
Male moose, called bulls, begin to grow antlers in springtime to prepare for the autumn mating season. Large, mature bulls with well-developed antlers usually get to mate with the female moose, called cows. When bulls are competing for the same cow, they may use their antlers to fight off their opponents. After the mating season, bulls drop their antlers. They regrow them again in the spring.
The young calves stay with their mothers for a year before venturing off to live a solitary lifestyle. Moose can live more than 20 years in the wild, but many begin to suffer the symptoms of old age before then. A more typical lifespan is 10 to 12 years.
Make sure you can properly identify elk and moose in the field. These tips will help you know the difference when you head out on your hunt.
Moose and elk often share the same habitats, leading to confusion. Still, there are several key differences that hunters can see to identify between the two.
- Bull Moose Color – darker and will not have the lighter coloring on the rump like
- Bull Elk Color – Reddish or Lighter Brown Coat
- Moose are the largest animal in Colorado and grow significantly larger than elk. A bull moose can grow to be 6 to 7 feet tall at the shoulders and weigh more than 1,000 pounds. A bull elk, meanwhile, is typically 4 to 5 feet tall and around 600 pounds.
- Elk have a reddish or lighter brown coat, while a moose coat is significantly darker and will not have the lighter coloring on the rump like an elk.
- Moose antlers will grow out of the sides of the head.
- Elk antlers grow backward over their bodies.
- Moose Calf – Round Nose
- Elk Cow – Narrow, Pointed Nose
Important Notice: Be sure to abide by all of your states hunting laws. Hunting calls are not legal in some areas. We are not responsible for any misuse of this application.