Free: Contests & Raffles.
Healthy buck to doe ratio is very important to healthy deer populations and competition between bucks makes it a lot more fun with them responding to calls and rattling. Habitat is much more important at this time to larger deer populations than letting does survive and breed. If a certain area has the maximum sustainable population, then any production in excess of the natural death rate will mean more deer will die of starvation and disease because of overpopulation or need to be harvested by hunting.Ideally, if you could have a 1:1 buck to breeding doe ratio, competition between buck for those few does would make for some exciting action. If you killed 1/2 the breeding does, the remaining 1/2 could in theory produce enough does to replace the ones that were killed and produce as many bucks...which would have to be harvested from the buck side to keep the population stable.Lets play with some numbers (assuming carrying capacity is 200 deer):100 buck and 100 does...harvest 50 does and 50 bucks...remaining 50 does on average will produce 50 does and 50 bucks...leaving 100 does and 100 bucksfrom same starting point harvest 10 does and 90 bucks...remaining 90 does will produce 90 bucks and 90 does...leaving 180 does and 100 bucks (90% young bucks) Now you have 80 more animals than can be sustained, so you will kill off 50 does and 30 bucks to starvation leaving 130 does and 70 bucks. You can probably see where that trend would end uplets start with 50 bucks and 100 does. Kill 10 bucks and 50 does. Remaining 50 will produce 50 does and 50 bucks leaving 90 bucks and 100 does (none die...190 deer). Next year take 40 bucks and 50 does. You'll be left with 100 does and 100 bucksMight be a little oversimplification (especially assuming that each doe can produce 2 offspring each year, but you can see the point. Killing does (as long as production rate replenishes the breeding doe population) in the long run lets you kill more bucks, and the bucks are older a.k.a bigger (you're letting half the bucks walk and survive another year)So yes, I'll kill a doe every time...until a buck bigger than any other that I have shot walks out. Now I won't shoot a doe when I'm elk hunting, but I also won't kill any buck that isn't a wall hanger.
The deer population seems down, I have no problem with killing antlerles but I just try to keep every doe alive for reproduction.
Quote from: Yak-NDN on August 27, 2011, 10:02:33 AMThe deer population seems down, I have no problem with killing antlerles but I just try to keep every doe alive for reproduction. Same here.I passed up a few does last year during late muzzleloader season (and a few spikes) because I know the population is lower than what it historically has been.