For the past 10 years we have always seen decent flock. Typical numbers of hens seen in groups of 10 to over 20. Would also see on camera and in the field at least 7 to 10 gobblers/jakes working the same property. This has dropped drastically and suddenly.
As of 2 years ago our neighbors (big commercial farm) across the creek and on one side have clear cut everything leaving my little 100 acres and my neighbor on the other side (300+ acres) with the only mature swamp bottom and standing timber and hardwood stands.
From August until now, we have only seen one small group of 6 to 8 hens and have only seen one gobbler. No jakes. We have heard 2 gobbling (while listening) over the last 2 weeks, but all cameras and personal sightings have still only seen the one male. We know it's the same male because we call him "patches" due to large solid white blotches on this wings that lack stripes.
This is of coarse concerning to me. My thinking is to not harvest any birds from the property this year but I'm having a hard time convincing my neighbor to refrain as well.
I feel that we should at least give this one male and small group of hens maximum opportunity for breeding success. But I'm no biologist. Are my concerns valid or is this just 'normal' turkey population fluctuation? Could harvesting the one gobbler wipe out our future population? Thoughts?