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Started by GobbleNut, July 20, 2021, 02:46:52 PM
Quote from: RutnNStrutn on July 20, 2021, 04:49:53 PMThe most sensible solution is banning stupid harvest methods. No rifle or pistol hunting of turkeys. Definitely no roost shooting. Who does this anyway, and why would states allow this?If that doesn't help the problem, go after issues that obviously impact turkey populations. No hen harvests, in fall or spring. No Jake harvests either. This will immediately be beneficial to turkey populations. More hens mean more breeding, and more jakes lead to more gobblers the following season, which also means more breeding. If that still doesn't achieve the desired results, then a reduction in the bag limits is a must!! Cut the bag limit to 2, or 1.Another idea that has merit is limiting the harvest in the early season when a lot of the breeding is being done. SC currently limits a hunter to one gobbler in the 1st ten days. Personally I would increase that to 2 weeks. This also limits non-resident harvests, since most guys only travel to a state on one trip. I don't think banning select hunting techniques would have much effect. I don't think fanning, for example, is done that much, or results in a large number of harvests. If none of the techniques I mentioned above achieved the desired results of a turkey population rebound, then I would take drastic measures. First I would encourage predator hunting. I would make it legal year round by any technique for all turkey or turkey nest predators, other than poison. In SC the DNR releases 1 tagged coyote a year in each of the state's 4 game zones. Any hunter who bags a tagged coyote gets a free lifetime hunting license. This encourages hunters to shoot every coyote they see. Next, if none of that achieved the desired results, I would use the method that would be highly unpopular, but surely effective. I would put a one year moratorium on hunting turkeys. That would surely make the population rebound. It might even take 2 years.On a side note, eliminating rifle and pistol hunting, roost shooting, jake and hen harvests, and moratoriums on turkey hunting would surely reduce the number of turkey "hunters" in the woods, which would reduce the harvests and help the populations. What do y'all think of those ideas? Sent from deep in the woods where the critters roam.
Quote from: WV Flopper on July 20, 2021, 08:22:04 PM1st off, Thank you GobbleNut for appointing me, Director of the WVDNR. Thank you! Season would start at the traditional time of 3rd Monday in April, and run 4 full weeks. Good bye early week! Rewards for prosecuted poachers would be raised, alot, and vary with the severity of the offenses. Fines for poached turkeys would be substantial, per offense, and mandatory. Loss of hunting privilege for poaching of turkey. I would hand pick three Analyst to review the last 21 years of harvest data for wild turkey. I want year, month, day, county, and region of all turkeys that were killed. Including fall harvests. I also want to know of the turkeys harvested how many hunters harvested 2 turkeys in WV in one season, Tagged out. This information will give the obvious, plus confirm or deny a growing hunter population. My state did not in the past, have a turkey permit, now we do "Thank you new Director" . Minimal amount, 10$ per tag. Purchased one at a time, second tag only after first turkey checked in. This does not promote a hunter to fill a tag on a jake last day of season. If it were documented that hunter numbers were increasing, a serious look at bag limits would have to be looked at. Currently, we have a two male turkey limit in the spring. I am not sure what it is in the fall. It varies per region I think, currently. If data shows a decline in harvest in a region (Multiple counties per Region) for three consecutive years fall turkey hunting would be by lottery permit. I would have to appoint some one to come up with an appropriate number of permits per Region. I would like to reduce my hen harvest by 75% after the 3 year consecutive decline. If after 3 years of my Lottery has not changed the population to the better, a reduction in the Region of the spring bag limits would be needed, reduced to 1. If this hasn't helped, reduction of season length may need to be looked at. Hard to do this per Region as I feal it will displace hunters to an adjacent Region and impact the harvest of that Region negatively. If after 3 more years the population has not increased the Region is CLOSED to ALL turkey harvesting. Again, hard to do this as it would most certainly displace turkey hunters to an adjacent Region and poaching would increase in the Region I am trying to protect. Concurrently while these items are taking place I am using my 10$ permit fees to promote predator control. Bounties have been done by many states and parties for a long time. They are very corrupt and easily taken advantage of. Mostly, they do not work. But, for resident licensed hunters and trappers we could put a monetary value on predators towards license fees or in the form of gift cards. But, no cash paid. To expand on this, as a hobby trapper I can say there is NO value in fur today with today's market. But, the DNR adding a 3$ value to a coon would raise the value of that coon to somewhere around 7$. That's not a good average, but it's better than 4$ if catching hundreds of coon. We would do this for skunk, possum as well. Exploring if fox, cat, coyote would make a significant difference, they could be added as well. This as Director is what I can do immediately. I can also hire new Biologists to help in research of mortality and nesting success. The Biologist can also research the weather trends for the past years so we can have a base line so as what to expect out of future harvests. In my mind there is not a quick fix to this situation. Some states may already be beyond my first few steps. They may need a more hard fast attack at this problem. This is as we all know, is a multi facet problem. Some of it we can not control, but at a minimum, learn what to expect. Many states have already found the correlation between weather, nesting, and poult survival. They should know what to expect for the year concerning poult survival due to weather.