By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Long before a hunter can display a trophy buck on
the wall, a landowner somewhere had to follow a plan that
encouraged that buck's growth. Quality
deer management is the strategy used to produce big deer by
controlling the environment and deer population. The goal is
to produce older bucks with big antlers. Ben
West, assistant professor of wildlife with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said unmanaged deer
populations grow large and tend not to produce the trophy
bucks. "Most
hunters in Mississippi want to see big bucks and want a
chance to harvest a big buck," West said. "Bucks reach their
peak antler size around 5 to 6 years of age, then decline in
size after that." West
said quality deer management involves three
concepts. "First,
allow the bucks to become mature," West said. "This is tough
for some hunters because it means they have to let some 2-
and 3-year-old deer pass without harvesting them. They
already have large antlers, but you have to remember they
have not maximized yet, so you have to be willing to let
those deer walk." While
hunters have to let larger, young bucks walk away, they do
need to harvest does to keep the population in
check. "As the
population becomes larger, there are fewer resources and
less nutrition to go around," West said. "It becomes
limiting and makes it more difficult for bucks to get the
nutrition they need to grow large antlers." Many
years ago, poor management nearly wiped out the deer
population in the Southeast. To help restore deer numbers,
laws prohibited the harvest of does. Those restrictions were
lifted in the 1990s, but many hunters still are hesitant to
shoot does. With too many does, the deer population in an
area can grow rapidly. "What
most people want is a population where the number of does
and bucks is about the same," West said. "You achieve this
by harvesting does." The
third part of quality deer management is habitat management.
West said most landowners in Mississippi spend too much time
thinking of what they can plant rather than managing what
they have year-round to optimize nutrition for
deer. "Food
plots are one strategy that landowners can use, but
prescribed burning and timber management give more bang for
your buck," West said. "Many native plants are excellent
forage for deer. Timber harvest creates open areas where
native plants can grow, and prescribed burnings often
stimulate the growth of grasses and herbaceous plants that
attract deer." West
said the best deer management plan is one that controls at
least 1,000 acres. Adjoining landowners can form wildlife
management associations to work together to meet deer
management goals. The
Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks
offers the Deer Management Assistance Program. This is a
free service where biologists make specific recommendations
for deer management based on goals and objectives of the
landowner and the data provided. Released:
Oct. 10, 2003
Forestry,
Wildlife & Fisheries News
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Management can
yield big
bucks for hunters
Contact: Dr. Ben West, (662) 325-3174
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:28
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fwnews/fw03/031010.html
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