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Started by eggshell, June 06, 2023, 07:35:43 AM
Quote from: eggshell on June 06, 2023, 07:35:43 AMHere's the ODW season summary. It tells a lot about what is happening. I was impressed that after only one season of reduced bag limits the kill went up...they are truly genious in their policy ( extreme sarcasm font). We already new we had a better hatch coming into the system and last years was good, so recruitment will be up, but still reducing opportunity. https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=683270620499223&set=a.226403159519307
Quote from: eggshell on June 07, 2023, 07:18:59 AMKyle, your feelings are in line with most turkey hunters I have discussed this with. They are satisfied the ODW is doing something and believe that it will help the population and kill numbers, eventually. I hope that is true, but I doubt it will make any significant difference 10 years from now. What difference would it have made this year? Going by trends it would have added around 3-4 thousand birds to the kill. That works out to one additional turkey killed for every 20,000+ acres or with the 1 limit it saves 1 gobbler for every 20,000+ acres. I doubt that is a number that will make any difference. In high pressure areas it might be higher.
Quote from: eggshell on June 07, 2023, 01:03:36 PMThis is the kind of discussion I like. well thought out and graciously offered opinions. Deerhunt, it looks like the 1 bird limit almost made jakes illegal. This actually plays into Gobblenut's points on breeding saturation. I wonder if taking too high of a percentage of mature gobblers over jakes is detrimental to breeding saturation. In my area many of the guys will take a jake as their first bird and then hunt a nice mature tom. I have done this myself and don't apologize for it. In the local contest their were a couple dozen teams of two hunters and only 5 teams had both members fill their tag. This is pretty typical as most springs it usually about 5 guys in the local group that fill both tags or 25%. So in my area it is insignificant to the resource. The problem with state wide regulations is our agencies are stuck with making broad sweeping regulations for the whole state or at least a region. Typically this means taking the worse case scenario and applying it across the board to all areas. There is no easy fix for this.I think breeding and nesting success is a big player in this. I am starting to think that human influence goes much further than hunting. I think human intrusion in many forms is detrimental. A new home built in a travel lane or a woods cleared that was loafing habitat may be a bigger player than we realize. All good questions.On the flip side, what is good breeding saturation. I looked into this some as our local Mennonite community is big on free range poultry. When you ask about male to female ratios you get numbers from 6-1 to 12-1. Commercial resources put the number between 10-12 males to hens. Also you will find warnings that too many males create a social structure where breeding competition diminishes breeding because males are too busy fighting and defending territory. I know the hunting is better where you have dense gobbler competition because they want to get to an available hen before the other guys. It is also space dependent, they need room to set up their control space and harem. Encroachment of turfs defer breeding to fighting. A lot to think about for sure. I try to keep my mind open and consider all aspects, but I do doubt that this bag limit change will bring us more turkeys in the future.