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Started by deerhunt1988, June 18, 2022, 09:30:26 AM
Quote from: deerhunt1988 on June 24, 2022, 11:17:10 AMQuote from: Paulmyr on June 23, 2022, 09:37:01 PMI keep hearing look at Arkansas as a metric as to why limiting harvest and season lengths don't work like it was supposed to cure the problem right away. From what I've read, up until the recent no Jake rules, Jake's made over 50% of the harvest in Arkansas. Tough to rebuild a population of gobblers when your killing more juveniles than the adults that are being removed.Except the jake rule isn't really "recent" there. It was implemented for 2011. As you can see below, after a decade of not killing jakes and a reduced season, their recruitment hasn't been helped. Data definitely doesn't support some of the current theories. There are bigger problems than "hens not getting bred/delayed breeding".
Quote from: Paulmyr on June 23, 2022, 09:37:01 PMI keep hearing look at Arkansas as a metric as to why limiting harvest and season lengths don't work like it was supposed to cure the problem right away. From what I've read, up until the recent no Jake rules, Jake's made over 50% of the harvest in Arkansas. Tough to rebuild a population of gobblers when your killing more juveniles than the adults that are being removed.
Quote from: Paulmyr on June 25, 2022, 02:10:47 PMQuote from: deerhunt1988 on June 24, 2022, 11:17:10 AMQuote from: Paulmyr on June 23, 2022, 09:37:01 PMI keep hearing look at Arkansas as a metric as to why limiting harvest and season lengths don't work like it was supposed to cure the problem right away. From what I've read, up until the recent no Jake rules, Jake's made over 50% of the harvest in Arkansas. Tough to rebuild a population of gobblers when your killing more juveniles than the adults that are being removed.Except the jake rule isn't really "recent" there. It was implemented for 2011. As you can see below, after a decade of not killing jakes and a reduced season, their recruitment hasn't been helped. Data definitely doesn't support some of the current theories. There are bigger problems than "hens not getting bred/delayed breeding".Interesting graph. Especially where it shows a spike in the hen polt ratio in 2012 a year after the implementation of the no Jake rule and the coinciding drop in 2013. I bet you'd be interested in the fact that Arkansas had its first ever recorded snow fall in may on the 3rd and also major flooding on may 31st through much of central Arkansas with totals reaching over 5" in Polk county on the western border of the state to Poinsette county on the north eastern part of the state in a 24 hour period.In 2014 there was an EF4 tornado the ripped through much of the same area in central Arkansas. The storm dumped heavy rains in much of north central to northeastern Ar. Over 7" in some areas. Clay, Cleburne, Fulton, Independence, Izard, Lawrence, Randolph, and sharp counties were all declared federal disaster areas mainly for high water.The weather stabilized a bit in 2015 and 2016 and this is reflected in the graph. In 2017 the state suffered a rain event in the April 30th time period where many portions of northern Arkansas were hammered with more than 6"of rain some reporting over 8" with 9.73" falling near Rogers . Short term rainfall records were set in little Rock with 1.55" falling in a 15 minute period and 2.17" over a 30 minute time period. If my memory serves me right Arkansas had pretty poor recruitment weather throughout the 2013 – 2017 time period other than the incidents I described above which incidentally coincide with the drops shown on your graph. Since this time period, starting in 2018 the hen polt ratios are on an upward trend. I think it would be disingenuous to use your graph as a metric to make the statement that since it's inception the no Jake rule hasn't helped the hen polt ratio as it seems the drops in the ratio appear to be weather related at least in correlation to the graph you provided. Is it helping? Possibly but I think more time is needed to show a correlation or lack there of. What I would say in relation to my previous post and your graph is the downward spiral appears to have stopped and it's going to take more than one or 2 good/great hatches for the population to recover to levels of the past.
Quote from: fallhnt on June 27, 2022, 06:42:29 AMWhy are turkeys plentiful in urban areas?
Quote from: Shiloh on June 27, 2022, 07:39:24 AMLack of predators and good habitat