From Outdoors Central
May Deer Management
By T.R. Michels
Apr 13, 2009 - 4:40:38 PM
There is no question that deer herds must be managed. Increasing human
populations, urban sprawl and changing land practices have led to less
available deer habitat while deer herds have continued to increase,
which has led to an overpopulation of deer in many areas. This has compelled
wildlife managers to issue abundant doe permits each year in order to
keep the deer herds within the carrying capacity of the available habitat.
The
deer management practices of many wildlife agencies revolve around the
need to balance the deer herds in relation to the habitat while still
trying to keep deer populations high enough for hunting, with hunting
as the primary method of deer reduction. The current practice of keeping
deer populations high enough that they can be hunted, and the past management
practice of bucks only hunting, combined with the belief by many hunters
that they should only shoot bucks if they want to keep deer numbers
high, is precisely the reason why there are too many deer, particularly
does.
It
is usually too many does (as in Minnesota and Wisconsin), not too many
bucks in a deer herd, that prompts game managers to issue numerous doe
permits in the hopes that enough deer will be removed to keep their
numbers at acceptable levels. Eventually this becomes a vicious cycle
and both the deer and the habitat suffer. The effects of this cycle
generally result in low buck:doe ratios and fewer numbers of dominant
breeding bucks, which leads to breeding periods that are later, and
longer, than they should be, resulting in poor spring survival rates
of fawns.
To
add to the problem of too many deer, but not enough bucks, the interest
in trophy hunting for white-tailed deer has skyrocketed in the past
few years. This interest in high scoring whitetail racks by numerous
hunters puts added pressure on the already depleted number of large
antlered animals, and further reduces the number of available older
dominant breeding bucks. Fewer numbers of bucks, particularly older
dominants, result in fewer contacts between the does and the priming
pheromones deposited by bucks at rubs and scrapes. These priming pheromones
are thought to cause the does to come into estrus and help synchronize
the rut activity between the does and the bucks. When these pheromones
are absent the does may come into estrus from as early as mid-October
to as late as January.
In
a deer management study by Larry Marchinton between 1981 and 1986, an
increase in the buck to doe ratio from 25:100 in 1981-82, to 54:100
in 1983-84 resulted in the average breeding date changing from November
11 in 1981 to October 15 in 1982, almost a month earlier than normal,
and the length of the breeding period was shortened from 96 to 43 days.
In another study using quality management techniques, the average breeding
date occurred almost two months earlier.
This article is adapted from
T.R. Michels' Deer Managers Manual ($9.95), and from the Deer Addict's
Manual, Volume 1 ($9.95).
If you are interested in more
whitetail hunting tips, or more whitetail biology and behavior, click
on
Trinity Mountain Outdoor News
and
T.R.'s Hunting Tips at
www.TRMichels.com
. If you have questions about whitetails
log on to the
T.R.'s Tips message board. To find out when the
rut starts, peaks and ends in your area click on
Whitetail Rut Dates
Chart.
T.R. Michels is a nationally
recognized game researcher/wildlife behaviorist, outdoor writer and
speaker. He is the author of the
Whitetail, Elk, Duck & Goose,
and
Turkey Addict's Manuals. His latest products are
Hunting
the Whitetail Rut Phases, the
Complete Whitetail Addict's Manual,
the 2008 Revised Edition of the
Elk Addict's Manual; and the
2008 Revised Edition of the
Duck & Goose Addict's Manual.
For a catalog of books and other hunting products contact: T.R. Michels,
Trinity Mountain Outdoors, E-mail:
TRMichels@yahoo.com
, Web Site:
www.TRMichels.com
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