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Started by shatcher, June 03, 2022, 04:34:50 PM
Quote from: Howie g on June 03, 2022, 07:12:25 PMMississippi needs to follow suit .. less the days added
Quote from: Shiloh on June 05, 2022, 07:45:00 AMMississippi will wait to see if this all has any positive effect in other states. Arkansas has tried everything and nothing has worked there. That situation has always been interesting to me. I would be for whatever works, but I'm not interested in throwing darts.
Quote from: arkrem870 on June 05, 2022, 10:03:03 AMQuote from: Shiloh on June 05, 2022, 07:45:00 AMMississippi will wait to see if this all has any positive effect in other states. Arkansas has tried everything and nothing has worked there. That situation has always been interesting to me. I would be for whatever works, but I'm not interested in throwing darts. Arkansas moved seasons back in the early 2000's with no success. Show me the studies where eggs are going un-fertilized
Quote from: deerhunt1988 on June 05, 2022, 11:10:41 AMQuote from: arkrem870 on June 05, 2022, 10:03:03 AMQuote from: Shiloh on June 05, 2022, 07:45:00 AMMississippi will wait to see if this all has any positive effect in other states. Arkansas has tried everything and nothing has worked there. That situation has always been interesting to me. I would be for whatever works, but I'm not interested in throwing darts. Arkansas moved seasons back in the early 2000's with no success. Show me the studies where eggs are going un-fertilizedUnless there is current research out there, not yet published, that shows this...There are no studies showing it! There is one research project going on right now that has analyzed over 100 turkey research projects seeing if any metrics have been changing over the past several decades. Looking at % of hens that initiate nests, mean nesting dates, nest success, etc. Basically a flat trend line on all these metrics compiled from nearly 50 years of research.Now maybe something drastic has changed the past 6-8 years to contribute to the decline and the most current research will show it. There are a ton of great projects going on right now and more forthcoming. Some of these changes we are seeing are not based on the best science, but more or less "theories" that have taken hold strong in the turkey community. I have not watched the TWRA commission meeting, but was told the commissioners went further than TWRA's recommendation. If that is true, just a another case of politics and emotion superseding biologist recommendations. This act has been on display in numerous other states as well when it comes to turkey regulations.
Quote from: deerhunt1988 on June 05, 2022, 12:29:20 PMIf hens aren't getting bred or the breeding process is being delayed, shouldn't we be seeing later nest initiation/incubation dates? There have been plenty of GPS'd hens out there over the last ~8 years and plenty on the ground now. I've yet to see anything published though that suggests nesting dates are being delayed. Perhaps the data is there but we just haven't seen it yet. Maybe tied up in the publication process? Still seems like it'd be on display as justification to some of these changes as much talk as there is about "hens not getting bred". Just hope we find some more definitive answers soon through all the newest research!
Quote from: tazmaniac on June 05, 2022, 12:16:54 PMQuote from: deerhunt1988 on June 05, 2022, 11:10:41 AMQuote from: arkrem870 on June 05, 2022, 10:03:03 AMQuote from: Shiloh on June 05, 2022, 07:45:00 AMMississippi will wait to see if this all has any positive effect in other states. Arkansas has tried everything and nothing has worked there. That situation has always been interesting to me. I would be for whatever works, but I'm not interested in throwing darts. Arkansas moved seasons back in the early 2000's with no success. Show me the studies where eggs are going un-fertilizedUnless there is current research out there, not yet published, that shows this...There are no studies showing it! There is one research project going on right now that has analyzed over 100 turkey research projects seeing if any metrics have been changing over the past several decades. Looking at % of hens that initiate nests, mean nesting dates, nest success, etc. Basically a flat trend line on all these metrics compiled from nearly 50 years of research.Now maybe something drastic has changed the past 6-8 years to contribute to the decline and the most current research will show it. There are a ton of great projects going on right now and more forthcoming. Some of these changes we are seeing are not based on the best science, but more or less "theories" that have taken hold strong in the turkey community. I have not watched the TWRA commission meeting, but was told the commissioners went further than TWRA's recommendation. If that is true, just a another case of politics and emotion superseding biologist recommendations. This act has been on display in numerous other states as well when it comes to turkey regulations.Biologists are taught (and it is true) that removing spring gobblers has no effect on overall populations if they are removed after hens have been bred that spring. The problem is, seasons were set (both in TN and MS) decades ago to start BEFORE peak breeding (which they are just now realizing due to the GPS collared hens). Granted, we just don't know what effect hunting has on population trends if gobblers are removed before hens have been bred.I hunt a lot in middle TN and over 30 years of experience... on my farms, peak nest initiation is early in the 4th week of April. Backing that up, first ovulation and breeding peaks mid April.I also hunt a lot in south MS... I only have about a decade of hard hunting here, but peak hatching in Forrest, Lamar, Marion, Greene and Perry counties seems to be mid to late May. Back that up 28d for incubation, another 14 to produce the clutch, then another 10 or so from first ovulation till first egg, and peak breeding locally should be end of March. I'm sure peak breeding in North MS is a bit later than south MS...Point is, I truly believe season in both MS and TN opens before peak breeding has even started.As far as late season goes, I've killed a gobbling tom in south MS the last day of the season (May 1) both last year and this year. While they are hard to come by, toms are still interested in looking for receptive hens much later than many folks think.This pic is from May 20th in south MS... 2-3 old poultsSent from my SM-G970U1 using Tapatalk
Quote from: arkrem870 on June 05, 2022, 01:32:26 PMWill you provide your source that's showing a significant number of hens aren't initiating nests at all. I would like to read this study.