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Buck Scrape research
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<blockquote data-quote="BSK" data-source="post: 5270802" data-attributes="member: 17"><p>The below graph is the 5-day running means for the two years laid over the top of each other. Before I analyzed the data, I expected to see similar patterns in peak scraping days, but that those peak days would be offset by about a week to 10 days. I've always believed our entire breeding process is earlier in a good acorn year versus a poor acorn year. However, so far the data does not suggest this is true. The peak days of bucks photographed chasing does is about the same. The one big difference is the much earlier and higher spike of scraping in a good acorn year just before peak breeding (which appears to be somewhere around Nov. 13-20 both years). In fact, I kind of find it interesting how peaks and valleys in activity sort of line up between the two years.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BSK, post: 5270802, member: 17"] The below graph is the 5-day running means for the two years laid over the top of each other. Before I analyzed the data, I expected to see similar patterns in peak scraping days, but that those peak days would be offset by about a week to 10 days. I've always believed our entire breeding process is earlier in a good acorn year versus a poor acorn year. However, so far the data does not suggest this is true. The peak days of bucks photographed chasing does is about the same. The one big difference is the much earlier and higher spike of scraping in a good acorn year just before peak breeding (which appears to be somewhere around Nov. 13-20 both years). In fact, I kind of find it interesting how peaks and valleys in activity sort of line up between the two years. [/QUOTE]
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