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Started by deerhunt1988, June 18, 2022, 09:30:26 AM
Quote from: nativeks on June 20, 2022, 02:18:39 PMI think it was always assumed that hunting was compensatory mortality. And I believe that is likely the case in an expanding, or stable population. However with current trends in populations I believe we have potentially swung into the additive category. Every bird's life matters more when the population numbers are lower. We can't keep exploiting the resource like we could when numbers are 10% of the highs we saw.
Quote from: nativeks on June 23, 2022, 03:28:08 PMI listened to the morning session of the Kansas Wildlife and Parks. They had outfitters come in and speak. The head of the outfitters association got up and said we need to reduce the season length, and take the entire state to one bird. Another said that properties he had 150-200 turkeys on now are totally devoid of birds. The birds are coming home to roost so to speak. I'll post the video when its available with the times so you can watch.
Quote from: GobbleNut on June 20, 2022, 08:55:21 AMFor decades, the theory of spring gobbler hunting was "the gobblers are surplus,...we don't have to worry about how many are killed in the spring". That theory is now changing to "wait a minute,...we have to have SOME gobblers (and enough gobblers) out there on the landscape during breeding season to start with!"
Quote from: GobbleNut on June 20, 2022, 08:55:21 AMHere is a "Duhhh" moment for everyone:The reason we are in the place we are with wild turkeys in those regions where they are declining is that reproductive success and survival of young turkeys to adulthood is not keeping up with adult mortality that is a result of all factors, including human hunting. The key/solution to this dilemma at its fundamental level is found in solving the reproduction/population recruitment problem. Wild turkey managers fully understand the above statement. They know that the solution is in reproduction rather than hunting restrictions. HOWEVER, they also know that reversing the reproduction problem is dependent upon having adequate numbers of adult turkeys "on the ground" if and when that happens. Managers are reaching that "protection mode" in many locations. For decades, the theory of spring gobbler hunting was "the gobblers are surplus,...we don't have to worry about how many are killed in the spring". That theory is now changing to "wait a minute,...we have to have SOME gobblers (and enough gobblers) out there on the landscape during breeding season to start with!" THAT is the reason we are seeing reduced seasons and bag limits! Wildlife managers are fully aware that hunting restrictions are not the answer,...but they also are aware that the ONLY hope for reversing the trend in declining numbers is to ensure there are adequate numbers of adult turkeys on the landscape to have ANY chance of recovery if and when the reproduction problem is solved. (Note: the only other solution is artificial supplementation of populations which, in my opinion, will have to be implemented at some point in the future)
Quote from: Archivist13 on June 23, 2022, 05:21:12 PMQuote from: GobbleNut on June 20, 2022, 08:55:21 AMFor decades, the theory of spring gobbler hunting was "the gobblers are surplus,...we don't have to worry about how many are killed in the spring". That theory is now changing to "wait a minute,...we have to have SOME gobblers (and enough gobblers) out there on the landscape during breeding season to start with!" Bingo! I brought this up earlier this spring and had some guy tell me that all gobblers are expendable and should be treated as such. I tried to explain that we need some left and he told me that the population will sustain itself with new hatches. I guess he doesn't care about having anything but jakes to hunt?!
Quote from: GobbleNut on June 23, 2022, 09:04:00 PMQuote from: Archivist13 on June 23, 2022, 05:21:12 PMQuote from: GobbleNut on June 20, 2022, 08:55:21 AMFor decades, the theory of spring gobbler hunting was "the gobblers are surplus,...we don't have to worry about how many are killed in the spring". That theory is now changing to "wait a minute,...we have to have SOME gobblers (and enough gobblers) out there on the landscape during breeding season to start with!" Bingo! I brought this up earlier this spring and had some guy tell me that all gobblers are expendable and should be treated as such. I tried to explain that we need some left and he told me that the population will sustain itself with new hatches. I guess he doesn't care about having anything but jakes to hunt?!To be clear, in an "ideal world" where turkeys are successfully reproducing enough that young turkeys reaching maturity are sustainably replacing mature turkeys that are dying from all the various mortality factors, then yes, the claim could be made that all gobblers are expendable in properly-timed spring seasons. It is an entirely different matter to make that claim under the conditions that exist now in places that clearly have demonstrated that successful recruitment is not keeping up with mortality. Simply stated, you cannot replace dead mature gobblers (or hens) with jakes (or jennies) if there are no jakes/jennies surviving to adulthood, whether it be from nesting failure or poult mortality. It does not take very many years of that happening until you have a real problem.
Quote from: cuttinAR on June 23, 2022, 09:26:05 PMQuote from: nativeks on June 23, 2022, 03:28:08 PMI listened to the morning session of the Kansas Wildlife and Parks. They had outfitters come in and speak. The head of the outfitters association got up and said we need to reduce the season length, and take the entire state to one bird. Another said that properties he had 150-200 turkeys on now are totally devoid of birds. The birds are coming home to roost so to speak. I'll post the video when its available with the times so you can watch.Where I hunt in Kansas, now for two decades, there were more hunters this year than any year prior. By a good margin. And most complained about being unsuccessful and lack of birds. It was as if they were living in 2005 and had no idea of the decline and just assumed Kansas was easy.
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: nativeks on June 23, 2022, 09:55:02 PMQuote from: cuttinAR on June 23, 2022, 09:26:05 PMQuote from: nativeks on June 23, 2022, 03:28:08 PMI listened to the morning session of the Kansas Wildlife and Parks. They had outfitters come in and speak. The head of the outfitters association got up and said we need to reduce the season length, and take the entire state to one bird. Another said that properties he had 150-200 turkeys on now are totally devoid of birds. The birds are coming home to roost so to speak. I'll post the video when its available with the times so you can watch.Where I hunt in Kansas, now for two decades, there were more hunters this year than any year prior. By a good margin. And most complained about being unsuccessful and lack of birds. It was as if they were living in 2005 and had no idea of the decline and just assumed Kansas was easy. They showed more data this afternoon but I wasnt able to snip fast enough. Population here by their metrics peaked in 08. Ive said 07 for alot of years but it close enough. We have one commissioner that is a big fall hunter and has blocked biologist attempts to close the fall season as stated in our management plan. They asked the outfitters about fall hunting and none of them there allow fall birds to be taken. One even said its a poor management practice with our current population. The look on the commissioner's face was priceless. NR numbers have stayed relatively flat even as bird numbers plummeted. The head of the outfitters association said he is worried that the only place his grandkids will get to see a turkey soon is a museum behind glass. Sent from my SM-G991U using Tapatalk