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Started by Tom007, June 01, 2022, 06:43:24 PM
Quote from: mikejd on June 03, 2022, 08:23:41 AMI was recently listening to a podcast. There was a gentlemen on there that said they put cameras on 228 ground nests in an area. This included grouse,Qual and turkey. The number of nests that survived from 228 was "0". Most where eaten by nest predators,skunk,possum and racoon. A few where taken by coyotes and a few of the hens also where taken by coyotes.If this does not sound like a problem then nothing will.Be interesting to see how many trapping licenses sell in your state compared to 20yrs ago when turkeys where booming.
Quote from: Dtrkyman on June 03, 2022, 11:32:13 AMIt is becoming evident that the nest predators is one of the major factors currently. I do not recall the numbers but DU or Delta did a study on duck nests in the same region, one area was heavily trapped and one was not at all, the nest success was drastically better on the trapped marsh, one of those common sense things but hard data is good to have!Years ago in central IL. coons got distemper and were wiped out, the turkey hunting over the following 10 or so years was incredible!
Quote from: redleg06 on June 03, 2022, 12:50:03 PMQuote from: Dtrkyman on June 03, 2022, 11:32:13 AMIt is becoming evident that the nest predators is one of the major factors currently. I do not recall the numbers but DU or Delta did a study on duck nests in the same region, one area was heavily trapped and one was not at all, the nest success was drastically better on the trapped marsh, one of those common sense things but hard data is good to have!Years ago in central IL. coons got distemper and were wiped out, the turkey hunting over the following 10 or so years was incredible!This is a quote from Sam Zeveloff- A zoologist. Important to note he's not saying the raccoon population has grown by 15-20%, he's saying it's increased 15-20 fold (which has continued to increase since the 1980's) : "Zeveloff says the North American raccoon population is estimated to have swelled 15 to 20 times between the 1930s and 1980s. Since then, it has continued to grow as more raccoons colonize not only cities and suburbs but deserts and mountainous areas, where they were once rare."It's just common sense that the higher the density of predators (nest predators in this case), the lower the chances of survival are on prey. For example - If you have an easter egg hunt in a 1 acre field, hide 10 eggs, and send a kid out to find those eggs, they might come back with 50-60% of them (depending how well you hid them and how good the kid is at looking). If you hide the same 10 eggs in the same field and send 10 kids out to find them, what are the chances many eggs don't get picked up? Point being, we're seeing more predators out hunting the eggs, per acre/square mile etc, and less eggs hidden in the field to find but, on this egg hunt, we can't go place more eggs in the field to go around but we can sure do our parts to reduce the participants in the egg hunt... You will hear biologist hint at predator control, and even some of the bigger hunting public figures/corporations etc. but in this climate with PETA lunatics around every corner, a society that largely doesn't like or understand hunting and trapping, you aren't going to hear many people just come out and say that we need to take out predators. They'll say we need to reduce bag limits on hunters (we're predators also) because that's more palatable to the general public, and improve habitat (again, more palatable) but you won't hear much on the trapping from a lot of these people because they can't afford to take that stand. Habitat and hunting definitely contribute to population but 70-80+ % of all turkey are being killed in the egg by nest predators (that's one of the few areas of turkey biology that is pretty well agreed on by everyone). Of the eggs that hatch, only 33% of those poults survive to become juveniles. The reality is that if we as turkey hunters (along with quail, and waterfowl hunters) decided to start trapping and making it a priority to reduce the predator population - specifically in the months leading up to nesting season, we'd see higher nest and poult survival, which is the bottleneck behind population decline. Hell, if half of the guys that are willing to go to the woods to go shoot turkey would also decide to pick up a trap before the season, it would put a dent in the population but most won't - they'll type about it on a forum or post about it on a facebook group. I hope that's a personal challenge to a lot of the people reading this to get up and do your part.
Quote from: Paulmyr on June 03, 2022, 01:34:03 PMQuote from: redleg06 on June 03, 2022, 12:50:03 PMQuote from: Dtrkyman on June 03, 2022, 11:32:13 AMIt is becoming evident that the nest predators is one of the major factors currently. I do not recall the numbers but DU or Delta did a study on duck nests in the same region, one area was heavily trapped and one was not at all, the nest success was drastically better on the trapped marsh, one of those common sense things but hard data is good to have!Years ago in central IL. coons got distemper and were wiped out, the turkey hunting over the following 10 or so years was incredible!This is a quote from Sam Zeveloff- A zoologist. Important to note he's not saying the raccoon population has grown by 15-20%, he's saying it's increased 15-20 fold (which has continued to increase since the 1980's) : "Zeveloff says the North American raccoon population is estimated to have swelled 15 to 20 times between the 1930s and 1980s. Since then, it has continued to grow as more raccoons colonize not only cities and suburbs but deserts and mountainous areas, where they were once rare."It's just common sense that the higher the density of predators (nest predators in this case), the lower the chances of survival are on prey. For example - If you have an easter egg hunt in a 1 acre field, hide 10 eggs, and send a kid out to find those eggs, they might come back with 50-60% of them (depending how well you hid them and how good the kid is at looking). If you hide the same 10 eggs in the same field and send 10 kids out to find them, what are the chances many eggs don't get picked up? Point being, we're seeing more predators out hunting the eggs, per acre/square mile etc, and less eggs hidden in the field to find but, on this egg hunt, we can't go place more eggs in the field to go around but we can sure do our parts to reduce the participants in the egg hunt... You will hear biologist hint at predator control, and even some of the bigger hunting public figures/corporations etc. but in this climate with PETA lunatics around every corner, a society that largely doesn't like or understand hunting and trapping, you aren't going to hear many people just come out and say that we need to take out predators. They'll say we need to reduce bag limits on hunters (we're predators also) because that's more palatable to the general public, and improve habitat (again, more palatable) but you won't hear much on the trapping from a lot of these people because they can't afford to take that stand. Habitat and hunting definitely contribute to population but 70-80+ % of all turkey are being killed in the egg by nest predators (that's one of the few areas of turkey biology that is pretty well agreed on by everyone). Of the eggs that hatch, only 33% of those poults survive to become juveniles. The reality is that if we as turkey hunters (along with quail, and waterfowl hunters) decided to start trapping and making it a priority to reduce the predator population - specifically in the months leading up to nesting season, we'd see higher nest and poult survival, which is the bottleneck behind population decline. Hell, if half of the guys that are willing to go to the woods to go shoot turkey would also decide to pick up a trap before the season, it would put a dent in the population but most won't - they'll type about it on a forum or post about it on a facebook group. I hope that's a personal challenge to a lot of the people reading this to get up and do your part.That's a pretty good analogy and I would tend to agree with it. The question I have is why aren't we seeing turkey numbers drop across the board? Why does it only affect certain areas of the country and not others?
Quote from: eggshell on June 03, 2022, 03:05:40 PMI agree, raccoons are public enemy number 1 in the woods and fields. I am guilty as all heck. Back in the 70s, 80s and early 90s I ran a trap line and I was once a professional grader/partner in a fur auction company. Then the market went bust and we disbanded the company and I hung up my traps. I would work hard to catch 50 raccoons in several miles of trapline a year. Now I can catch 15 to 20 around my garden and barn. On the farm if a raccoon got into the chickens he'd kill several chicken and destroy all the eggs over a couple nights before you caught him. Just think what is happening with the density we have now.
Quote from: arkrem870 on June 04, 2022, 08:19:40 PMNest predation is the elephant in the room. It's also the hardest to control. That's why it's all but ignored by most states dnr and the experts. The drop in nest success correlates directly with falling fur prices.