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<blockquote data-quote="fairchaser" data-source="post: 5515766" data-attributes="member: 10373"><p>I wish that these changes to the regs were the result of long standing and proven scientific study rather than the speculation of a few zealots. Dr. Harper's study basically agrees with the first hand findings of many turkey hunters who see the after effects of broken eggs and destroyed nests along with small numbers of surviving poults. This idea that hens aren't bred because the dominant bird is killed early on sounds like the idea that only mature bucks breed does. DNA studies have proven this falsehood too. When two are three changes are made simultaneously, you can't prove which if any are beneficial to the results. Moving season dates and reducing limits are too drastic imo.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="fairchaser, post: 5515766, member: 10373"] I wish that these changes to the regs were the result of long standing and proven scientific study rather than the speculation of a few zealots. Dr. Harper’s study basically agrees with the first hand findings of many turkey hunters who see the after effects of broken eggs and destroyed nests along with small numbers of surviving poults. This idea that hens aren’t bred because the dominant bird is killed early on sounds like the idea that only mature bucks breed does. DNA studies have proven this falsehood too. When two are three changes are made simultaneously, you can’t prove which if any are beneficial to the results. Moving season dates and reducing limits are too drastic imo. [/QUOTE]
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