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Whitetails are more aggressive and territorial than MD. While there range can does overlap in certain areas, they do not get along and over time MD will get pushed out and leave. That is why Central WA has had an any buck tag for WT for years.
Quote from: chukarchaser on January 16, 2021, 09:56:18 AMWhitetails are more aggressive and territorial than MD. While there range can does overlap in certain areas, they do not get along and over time MD will get pushed out and leave. That is why Central WA has had an any buck tag for WT for years. Texas Mule deer would disagree with you. I also believed this before moving to Oklahoma. After reading up on Texas Muleys they have had no problem competing with whitetails. There is no winter range or migration there, yet you can find both in the same Game Units.
Something else to consider is that we have altered the landscape in favor of whitetails, with forest patches becoming denser due to fire suppression and irrigated or otherwise productive farm fields producing higher quality forage that whitetails need. A good example is where I live- the Palouse- which was historically shrub steppe and ponderosa woodland, and was mule deer habitat. Now, with denser forest patches and lots of garbanzo beans and winter wheat, it is known more for white-tailed deer.
Quote from: elkboy on January 18, 2021, 08:53:44 AMSomething else to consider is that we have altered the landscape in favor of whitetails, with forest patches becoming denser due to fire suppression and irrigated or otherwise productive farm fields producing higher quality forage that whitetails need. A good example is where I live- the Palouse- which was historically shrub steppe and ponderosa woodland, and was mule deer habitat. Now, with denser forest patches and lots of garbanzo beans and winter wheat, it is known more for white-tailed deer. I agree that human effects are a bigger factor in changes in mule deer and whitetail abundance than direct competition between the two species. In addition to the habitat changes, when both species are hunted under common general seasons outside the rut, mule deer are harvested at a higher rate than whitetails. The Black Hills of Wyoming and South Dakota offer an interesting situation where the opposite is true. The BHNF is managed for ponderosa pine very similar to private industrial forest lands with primarily even-age management and seed tree clearcuts being the norm. This has opened up the habitat and favored mule deer over whitetails, it is one of the few public land areas where both species overlap that mule deer abundance has increased and whitetails declined.
One of the guys in camp this year saw a whitetail doe up on Stormy mt. in the Entiat this last season. I shot a small buck down low in the Entiat, but have never seen them as high a Stormy.