| Pennsylvania's
2005 Deer
Outlook Part 1: Our Best Hunting Hotspots
No one will argue that Pennsylvania hunters will
have fewer deer available this year. But hunters
who are more flexible and study the situation
and go where deer are more abundant might be in
for some pleasant surprises.
The estimated deer harvest was down about 12 percent
last year in Pennsylvania compared to the previous
year. These harvest figures do not include deer
taken with Deer Management Assistance Program
(DMAP) tags.
"The problem is we haven't received 100 percent
of the reports from the DMAPs," said Jerry
Feaser, Pennsylvania Game Commission press secretary.
Hunters
habitually complain about the accuracy of deer
harvest figures. But these complaints are typically
directed toward the Game Commission when the actual
blame rests squarely on the shoulders of hunters.
Estimates of the actual deer harvests are made
by comparing the deer that are taken to meat processors
with the harvest report cards that are received
by the Game Commission. Approval of on-line deer
harvest reporting might improve the regular harvest
reporting rate somewhat. It has already been used
for DMAP.
Excluding the DMAP numbers, last year, Pennsylvania
hunters harvested 409,320 deer. Despite the uproar
from hunters, that was the sixth-largest harvest
since 1986, when the Game Commission began estimating
harvests. It consisted of 124,410 antlered deer
(a 13 percent decline) and 284,910 antlerless
deer, a 12 percent decline.
Another decline in the deer harvest should be
expected this year due to significant reductions
in antlerless license allocations. Allocations
in the urban areas (wildlife management units
2B, 5C and 5D) will remain the same as last year,
as will WMUs 2A and 4E, but in the rest of the
state there has been an average 18 percent reduction.
Many hunters have urged the Game Commission to
reduce the antlerless deer season or return to
the old system of a short antlerless deer season
following the regular bucks-only season as a means
of reducing antlerless harvests. This is not likely
to happen.
"We didn't know what was going to happen
as a consequence of the short season," Ross
explained.
Harvests under the short season were too unpredictable
because of highly variable weather conditions.
No snow or too much snow often reduced harvests.
The two-week concurrent season makes harvest estimations
much more reliable.
There is another positive side to the concurrent
season, according to Dr. Christopher Rosenberry,
a PGC Deer Management Section supervisor. Results
of a recent survey about hunters' attitudes indicated
that lack of time was the second most important
reason why hunters are giving up hunting. The
top reasons are age and health-related issues.
"We can't do anything about hunters' ages
and health, but we can provide them more time
to hunt, more time to use the licenses they have
purchased, as a means of preserving, protecting
and promoting our state's hunting heritage,"
Rosenberry said.
(to
read more click here)
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