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Started by GobbleNut, July 20, 2021, 02:46:52 PM
Quote from: eggshell on July 21, 2021, 02:55:39 PMQuoteHey eggshell - We hear a lot of talk about later starting dates to helpensure more hens get bred. What about the benefit of shorter seasonsin regards to recruitment. Specifically, by hunters bumping hens off ofnests for a shorter time period, would that help with predator satiation,thereby increasing recruitment?I wonder if someone has compared population declines in states withshorter seasons, like Missouri and Kentucky, against states that have longer seasons.Jimspur, I will answer in respect to Ohio, were I live. I live right in the turkey woods and I listen to turkeys all year around and start monitoring the activity in the spring in March. MOst years I hear groups of gobblers and see flocks with strutters and hens up until about the 7-10th of April. Gobbling starts about mid to late March., but they are mostly developing a pecking order. By the April dates I hear gobblers on the same areas or strut zones daily. Then they go quiet for about two weeks and I think that is our prime breeding period. Hens are flocked up with gobblers and actively breeding. Then I start seeing less hens and hear more gobbling about the third week and this coincides with the opening of our season. You will continue to see hens with gobblers and breeding happening, but it's less all the time. I think by the end of April most hens are bred. I think our season is OK. I do realize some states open during the period I spoke of that is equivalent to the second week of April for us and yes I think that hurts as hunters interfere. Here's the kicker. All these opening dates were in existence when flocks were booming and expanding. My question is why would it affect breeding now when it didn't then? In a crisis situation yes anything that preserves a hen and her nest is an improvement. So a shorter season or shorter days (like noon stoppage) may save a few, it's not the end all - save all. There is a bigger problem/problems. I think what we are seeing is not a single problem, but a compound problem with two or three things existing as co-morbities. I don't know if anyone has compared existing seasons.
QuoteHey eggshell - We hear a lot of talk about later starting dates to helpensure more hens get bred. What about the benefit of shorter seasonsin regards to recruitment. Specifically, by hunters bumping hens off ofnests for a shorter time period, would that help with predator satiation,thereby increasing recruitment?I wonder if someone has compared population declines in states withshorter seasons, like Missouri and Kentucky, against states that have longer seasons.
Quote from: Turkeyman on July 21, 2021, 04:49:08 PMNot really trying to "blow anything out of the water" but I see what I see...and I've been at this game for close to 50 years. I see hunting pressure/techniques having no factor whatsoever on overall turkey populations where I hunt. Now...where you hunt may be a different story. It ere what it ere. I'll stick to weather and predators...at least to where I hunt.
Quote from: eggshell on July 21, 2021, 06:44:29 PMOh, I made an assumption and was wrong sorry Jimspur. Actually, you make a good point and I would be more supportive of closing season sooner on the back end. It's pretty well accepted that a hen who has already been incubating is less likely to renest if interrupted. I have watched hens that nest on my property and if you bump them once they usually return, but do it twice or more and they abandon the nest.