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Doe management question
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<blockquote data-quote="Urban_Hunter" data-source="post: 5429628" data-attributes="member: 12353"><p>I've never followed along with this, but I'm trying to understand. My vision is blurred due to some coyote and fawn deprivation stats I've seen over the years and I'm curious as to what you guys think and do.</p><p></p><p>I've seen the coyote stat about how a female fawn can have two female fawns and then the three of them have fawns and how over a deer's lifetime it's family tree could have over 100 deer in it, therefore losing that one fawn to a coyote potentially removed 100 deer from the 5-7 year population. My theory has always been, half of those deer are bucks (so 50) and maybe a percentage reaches maturity and a percentage of those are prized bucks. Let's just say 3… out of the hundred. So, if I got my hunting area and take out 10 does, I'm potentially taking away 30 bucks that I would prefer to have on the hoof. Also, reducing the area population by, in the example, 100 fold. </p><p></p><p>I know there are outside influences as well, I just don't understand how reducing breeding does increases buck chances. However, in owning my property for 6 years, I've only taken 1 doe. The hunting pressure on neighboring properties has dropped significantly since locals have moved out and doctors and yuppies moving in. The deer population seems like it has exploded. However… it seems like buck/doe here is minimally at 10:1. Trail cams make it seem like 20:1. How and why is this the case? Drove our "loop" yesterday evening, a few square miles, counted 54 deer in yards and fields, all does barring two spikes and a 4pt.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Urban_Hunter, post: 5429628, member: 12353"] I’ve never followed along with this, but I’m trying to understand. My vision is blurred due to some coyote and fawn deprivation stats I’ve seen over the years and I’m curious as to what you guys think and do. I’ve seen the coyote stat about how a female fawn can have two female fawns and then the three of them have fawns and how over a deer’s lifetime it’s family tree could have over 100 deer in it, therefore losing that one fawn to a coyote potentially removed 100 deer from the 5-7 year population. My theory has always been, half of those deer are bucks (so 50) and maybe a percentage reaches maturity and a percentage of those are prized bucks. Let’s just say 3… out of the hundred. So, if I got my hunting area and take out 10 does, I’m potentially taking away 30 bucks that I would prefer to have on the hoof. Also, reducing the area population by, in the example, 100 fold. I know there are outside influences as well, I just don’t understand how reducing breeding does increases buck chances. However, in owning my property for 6 years, I’ve only taken 1 doe. The hunting pressure on neighboring properties has dropped significantly since locals have moved out and doctors and yuppies moving in. The deer population seems like it has exploded. However… it seems like buck/doe here is minimally at 10:1. Trail cams make it seem like 20:1. How and why is this the case? Drove our “loop” yesterday evening, a few square miles, counted 54 deer in yards and fields, all does barring two spikes and a 4pt. [/QUOTE]
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