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Started by Mossyguy, April 18, 2020, 09:45:16 PM
Quote from: Spurs Up on April 19, 2020, 08:24:43 AMQuote from: Paulmyr on April 18, 2020, 11:05:39 PMQuote from: GobbleNut on April 18, 2020, 10:52:24 PMI have heard this on and off over the years. Not sure how they concluded that every jake is incapable of semen production,...would like to see the sample size of the study and whether it was undertaken with all subspecies in all parts of the country. Here's another tidbit that folks should consider when talking about shooting gobblers in the spring. Decades ago, similar studies showed that a single breeding from a gobbler can result in the fertilization of all of the eggs a hen may lay in a spring. That study showed that hens can store viable semen for as long as two months after a single successful breeding. Assuming both the "infertile jake" study and the "single breeding" study are valid, then the real concern about spring hunting as far as actual breeding is concerned is that the spring hunting season is set after turkeys have had adequate opportunity to ensure that most, if not all, nesting-age hens have been bred. In reality, when all is said and done, the real problem is not that hens are not getting bred and laying fertile eggs. It is that there is no corresponding nesting success and successful raising of poults to adulthood due most likely to a combination of factors, many of which have been discussed here many times.I think the biggest problem with hunting disrupting the breeding season is that hens nest at different times through out the spring instead of saturation nesting where all the nest and polt rearing is supposed to happen at the same time. Polts need about 3 weeks before they can roost off the ground. Until that time the nest/polts and the hen are extremely vulnerable to predation. If they are allowed breeding without disruption predators have a smaller time period in which nest/broods are vulnerable.Is there a study to back that up? Seems to me like that would be easy to tease out by comparing the timing and success of nesting of turkeys in unhunted populations with those in hunted ones. They might all begin nesting at roughly same time but with high levels of predation on nests and the capacity to nest again after loss, the nesting season is always going to be spread out. Wouldn't it???And I still don't understand how those guys know when a turkey lays it's first egg (so when nesting first starts). Once a hen starts sitting on the nest at night, I guess they could back date it. But what about those nests that are found by a snake or raccoon on the same day the first egg or second egg is layed? I don't think their tracking devices tell them with any certainty that a hen has just started a nest. If that is the case, then their observed average start of nesting season is going to be later than it might actually be. Until I see some study to back this up, it will be hard for me to get behind moving the season later or not trying to kill the boss tom on opening morning.
Quote from: Paulmyr on April 18, 2020, 11:05:39 PMQuote from: GobbleNut on April 18, 2020, 10:52:24 PMI have heard this on and off over the years. Not sure how they concluded that every jake is incapable of semen production,...would like to see the sample size of the study and whether it was undertaken with all subspecies in all parts of the country. Here's another tidbit that folks should consider when talking about shooting gobblers in the spring. Decades ago, similar studies showed that a single breeding from a gobbler can result in the fertilization of all of the eggs a hen may lay in a spring. That study showed that hens can store viable semen for as long as two months after a single successful breeding. Assuming both the "infertile jake" study and the "single breeding" study are valid, then the real concern about spring hunting as far as actual breeding is concerned is that the spring hunting season is set after turkeys have had adequate opportunity to ensure that most, if not all, nesting-age hens have been bred. In reality, when all is said and done, the real problem is not that hens are not getting bred and laying fertile eggs. It is that there is no corresponding nesting success and successful raising of poults to adulthood due most likely to a combination of factors, many of which have been discussed here many times.I think the biggest problem with hunting disrupting the breeding season is that hens nest at different times through out the spring instead of saturation nesting where all the nest and polt rearing is supposed to happen at the same time. Polts need about 3 weeks before they can roost off the ground. Until that time the nest/polts and the hen are extremely vulnerable to predation. If they are allowed breeding without disruption predators have a smaller time period in which nest/broods are vulnerable.
Quote from: GobbleNut on April 18, 2020, 10:52:24 PMI have heard this on and off over the years. Not sure how they concluded that every jake is incapable of semen production,...would like to see the sample size of the study and whether it was undertaken with all subspecies in all parts of the country. Here's another tidbit that folks should consider when talking about shooting gobblers in the spring. Decades ago, similar studies showed that a single breeding from a gobbler can result in the fertilization of all of the eggs a hen may lay in a spring. That study showed that hens can store viable semen for as long as two months after a single successful breeding. Assuming both the "infertile jake" study and the "single breeding" study are valid, then the real concern about spring hunting as far as actual breeding is concerned is that the spring hunting season is set after turkeys have had adequate opportunity to ensure that most, if not all, nesting-age hens have been bred. In reality, when all is said and done, the real problem is not that hens are not getting bred and laying fertile eggs. It is that there is no corresponding nesting success and successful raising of poults to adulthood due most likely to a combination of factors, many of which have been discussed here many times.
Quote from: Spurs Up on April 19, 2020, 01:06:14 PMP: I used nest predation only as an example of a factor that could contribute to observations of a lengthy nesting season. Sorry if that created any confusion. Nest predation and hunting are unrelated as far as I know, which is not much. My point, if any, is while it might make sense that disrupting breeding is responsible for population declines, there's not a lot of science behind it. Some research data or a study designed to address this hypothesis would go a long way to confirm (or dispel) what is right now we'll-reasoned speculation.
Quote from: Paulmyr on April 19, 2020, 01:55:38 PMQuote from: Spurs Up on April 19, 2020, 01:06:14 PMP: I used nest predation only as an example of a factor that could contribute to observations of a lengthy nesting season. Sorry if that created any confusion. Nest predation and hunting are unrelated as far as I know, which is not much. My point, if any, is while it might make sense that disrupting breeding is responsible for population declines, there's not a lot of science behind it. Some research data or a study designed to address this hypothesis would go a long way to confirm (or dispel) what is right now we'll-reasoned speculation.I'll take the guys word on it. He's been studying this bird for the about last 30 years. It doesn't sound like it's only a job to him. It sounds like it's his passion. It's what he does. I trust his sumerizations of turkey behavior instead of needing to see the exact study in the vast expanse of his work. The things he says make sense to me and verify what I thought I had learned from hunting them over the same time period of his work.
Quote from: TauntoHawk on April 19, 2020, 09:11:05 AMQuote from: bbcoach on April 19, 2020, 07:34:02 AMNot disputing what is said but why do adult gobblers protect their hens from the runts then? They will keep them at a distance or even run them off. Also those same jakes will fight an adult bird for those hens. I've seen plenty of jakes with hens of their own.Jakes will mate if given the chance but often the Jake's seaman potency is not high enough to fertilize the hen. He also touched on that some hens will refuse to mate with lesser males.I think the point he was making is it is not in our own interest to rely on a few jakes to "get the job done" if we want to maximize the already difficult and delicate breading cycle for turkeys each spring. His warning was we can't have our cake and eat it too. If you want the very best hatches and bumper future generations of birds to hunt we can't be out there killing a larger portion of the mature males before or during peak breading. Sent from my Pixel 2 using Tapatalk
Quote from: bbcoach on April 19, 2020, 07:34:02 AMNot disputing what is said but why do adult gobblers protect their hens from the runts then? They will keep them at a distance or even run them off. Also those same jakes will fight an adult bird for those hens. I've seen plenty of jakes with hens of their own.
Quote from: dzsmith on April 19, 2020, 11:37:38 PMQuote from: bbcoach on April 19, 2020, 07:34:02 AMNot disputing what is said but why do adult gobblers protect their hens from the runts then? They will keep them at a distance or even run them off. Also those same jakes will fight an adult bird for those hens. I've seen plenty of jakes with hens of their own.the live video from lsu ag wasnt debating that jakes did not try to breed hens, or were incapable of going through the motions . it was just the point that they werent fertile yet. like a preteen almost in puberty.It was the first id heard of it to....
Quote from: Sir-diealot on April 20, 2020, 12:21:18 AMQuote from: dzsmith on April 19, 2020, 11:37:38 PMQuote from: bbcoach on April 19, 2020, 07:34:02 AMNot disputing what is said but why do adult gobblers protect their hens from the runts then? They will keep them at a distance or even run them off. Also those same jakes will fight an adult bird for those hens. I've seen plenty of jakes with hens of their own.the live video from lsu ag wasnt debating that jakes did not try to breed hens, or were incapable of going through the motions . it was just the point that they werent fertile yet. like a preteen almost in puberty.It was the first id heard of it to....I remember on that webcast they said that if the box tom were killed they would not just move to the next one in line, that they would have to reestablish a pecking order before breeding would continue but I did not hear about them being infertile.