From Penn State's news service (edited for brevity)
A researcher in Penn State's College of Agricultural Sciences, working under contract with the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR), this spring is unveiling a new rapid habitat-assessment tool for state officials to use in measuring the impact of deer browsing on public lands.
Gauging the effects of deer browsing is important because both DCNR and the Pennsylvania Game Commission have stated concern about the condition of the state's forests after decades of suspected overbrowsing by too many white-tailed deer. State officials say that desired tree species, such as red oaks, are not regenerating. The Game Commission is changing its deer-management strategy from simply estimating deer numbers to also assessing forest habitat conditions and deer-herd health.
"Measuring deer impacts on relatively small blocks of forestland is not a new concept, with scientists repeatedly making intensive measurements of tree regeneration," said Duane Diefenbach, adjunct associate professor of wildlife in Penn State's School of Forest Resources and assistant unit leader of the Pennsylvania Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit. "But we are entering into uncharted territory here. The question is, can we develop an accurate, cost-effective technique for using these measures across a broad scale to help make management decisions for hundreds of square miles of forest? Except for the Kinzua Quality Deer Cooperative in northwestern Pennsylvania, I am not aware of any study collecting vegetation data directly relevant to deer browsing on such a large scale."
In the coming months, Diefenbach, his colleagues in the School of Forest Resources, and his most dependable students will be walking transects -- with the aid of geographic information system technology -- and counting plants. They will tally wildflowers that deer prefer, such as Canada mayflower, jack in the pulpit, Indian cucumber and trillium. They will count tree seedlings of every species under 3 feet in height, and they will count shrubs and saplings. "We are going to count plant species known to be preferred by deer," he said. "And we will be quantifying the presence of plants such as mountain laurel and ferns that interfere with the regeneration of trees.
"We have tried to choose simple, quantitative measures -- mostly counting plants or recording presence," Diefenbach added. "We will be entering the data on field computers that have built in error-checking routines. Over the course of this summer, we hope to collect data from 3,000 plots over an area of about 500 square miles. The idea is to make this a rapid assessment. We can't afford to take detailed measurements everywhere. We'd like to spend as little as 10 minutes at a site collecting data, and then move on the next site, ultimately covering as large an area as possible."
Merlin Benner, a DCNR wildlife biologist based in Wellsboro, believes the rapid habitat assessment tool being developed by Penn State is important for managing the 2.1 million acres of forestland in the state forest system. "We have all kinds of protocols for monitoring habitat, but they are pretty intensive and they are intended to look at stands of trees to make timber management decisions on plots from 30 to 100 acres," he says. "DMAP is on a larger scale, on the order of tens of thousands of acres. We need a habitat-assessment tool that is more applicable across a broader scale and takes less effort.
"The shortcoming of our other monitoring is that it only focuses on tree species," Benner added. "We (the state Bureau of Forestry) have begun our own browsing surveys and we have done it using the available literature, but we feel there is the potential for something better, and we hope that is provided by Diefenbach's work."
Diefenbach knows that deer management and habitat assessment are extremely controversial in Pennsylvania, with many hunters contending
that the Game Commission and DCNR have lowered deer numbers to unacceptably low levels on public lands. He also understands that angry sportsmen skeptical about valuing trees over deer are likely to second-guess his methods and doubt his data.
"I am not concerned about that -- good habitat is critical for good deer hunting," he said. "I picked the best students I could find, and our methodology is objective, transparent and reliable. I am confident about the quality of the data we are going to collect. We are using the best science available and incorporating measures that scientists have proposed as deer-browsing indicators.
Wednesday, May 10, 2006
Monday, May 08, 2006
VIRGINIA NEWS: Group Forms to Fight Declining Deer Population
Deer hunters concerned with a declining deer population on national forest land have created an alliance to increase the presence of the animals.
Myron Reedy, co-founder of the Shenandoah Sportsmen’s Alliance, said Rockingham County needs a group dedicated to improving the habitat for deer.
"It’s a shame to not have enough deer in the forest for hunting," he said. "Hopefully this group will be able to figure out some corrective changes."
For the last five years, the number of deer killed during hunting in Rockingham County has declined. According to the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, 5,536 deer were killed in 2000, compared to 4,085 killed in 2005, a 26 percent decrease.
Rodney Mongold, another co-founder of the alliance, worries that future generations will become bored with the outdoors if there is nothing to hunt.
"This is about the children," he said. "I don’t want my kids out on the street or playing video games. But if they get bored being in the outdoors, that’s what they might do."
The concerns of the alliance stem specifically from a decreasing number of deer killed in the George Washington National Forest. According to the game department, 1,050 deer were killed on national forest land in 2000. Last year, 656 were killed, a 38 percent decrease.
"I don’t want to have to drive to Kentucky to get a nice white-tailed deer," Mongold said. "We’re losing tax dollars if no one comes to the state to hunt."
Myron Reedy, co-founder of the Shenandoah Sportsmen’s Alliance, said Rockingham County needs a group dedicated to improving the habitat for deer.
"It’s a shame to not have enough deer in the forest for hunting," he said. "Hopefully this group will be able to figure out some corrective changes."
For the last five years, the number of deer killed during hunting in Rockingham County has declined. According to the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, 5,536 deer were killed in 2000, compared to 4,085 killed in 2005, a 26 percent decrease.
Rodney Mongold, another co-founder of the alliance, worries that future generations will become bored with the outdoors if there is nothing to hunt.
"This is about the children," he said. "I don’t want my kids out on the street or playing video games. But if they get bored being in the outdoors, that’s what they might do."
The concerns of the alliance stem specifically from a decreasing number of deer killed in the George Washington National Forest. According to the game department, 1,050 deer were killed on national forest land in 2000. Last year, 656 were killed, a 38 percent decrease.
"I don’t want to have to drive to Kentucky to get a nice white-tailed deer," Mongold said. "We’re losing tax dollars if no one comes to the state to hunt."
Sunday, May 07, 2006
MINNESOTA NEWS: Deer descimate state Scientific & Natural Area
The Department of Natural Resources is proposing a deer kill on an island in Pokegama Lake, where deer have been decimating a rare evergreen bush.
Canadian yew once covered vast areas of Minnesota's northern hardwood forests, but in recent years only a few scraggly stems of the shrubs are found spread across the region.
Logging and clearing for homes left yew shrubs in many area exposed to direct sunlight, which they can't tolerate. On top of that, deer consider yews a delicacy.
A dramatic increase in Minnesota's deer herd has resulted in a further decline in Canadian yew bushes.
In 1992, many yew were found on 28-acre Chisholm Point Island in Cohasset. Old-growth maples shaded the ground, and big yew - in some places as tall as a person - covered nearly half the island.
The state purchased the island and designated it as a state Scientific and Natural Area in 2002.
But deer discovered the yew two years later, when they began wading out to the island and crossing over ice for the first time in memory.
"Back in the 1980s, there were spots so thick with yew that you couldn't walk through it. It was like a rain forest," said Randy McCarty, who lives on the lake near the island. "Now, there are deer trails everywhere where there weren't any.... There are places where the yew is literally gone, wiped out."
Steve Wilson, Scientific and Natural Area specialist for the DNR in northern Minnesota, visited the island in January and discovered deer were decimating the remaining yew. He knew he needed to take action.
"It's amazing how fast it's happened. When I went back this winter, it was much worse than last summer," Wilson said. "If we don't do something right now, we're going to lose it all."
The DNR plans to build fencing around some remaining stands of yew this summer, and plans are in the works to allow bow hunters to kill deer on the island this fall.
The DNR holds a public hearing Tuesday on the deer-hunting plan.
If a public deer hunt doesn't trim herd numbers, the DNR may move to a more intensive special-permit hunt in 2007. The DNR also may allow hunters to shoot more deer in a broader area around Pokegama Lake.
As a last resort, sharpshooters may be called in to trim deer that are frequenting the island, especially during the winter.
Wilson said the effort to save the yew isn't just an ecological issue.
"Remember that it's the related (Pacific) yew that gave us Taxol," Wilson said of the now-famous chemotherapy drug. "We don't want to lose something and then discover what it might have given us."
"If we don't do something right now, we're going to lose it all."
Canadian yew once covered vast areas of Minnesota's northern hardwood forests, but in recent years only a few scraggly stems of the shrubs are found spread across the region.
Logging and clearing for homes left yew shrubs in many area exposed to direct sunlight, which they can't tolerate. On top of that, deer consider yews a delicacy.
A dramatic increase in Minnesota's deer herd has resulted in a further decline in Canadian yew bushes.
In 1992, many yew were found on 28-acre Chisholm Point Island in Cohasset. Old-growth maples shaded the ground, and big yew - in some places as tall as a person - covered nearly half the island.
The state purchased the island and designated it as a state Scientific and Natural Area in 2002.
But deer discovered the yew two years later, when they began wading out to the island and crossing over ice for the first time in memory.
"Back in the 1980s, there were spots so thick with yew that you couldn't walk through it. It was like a rain forest," said Randy McCarty, who lives on the lake near the island. "Now, there are deer trails everywhere where there weren't any.... There are places where the yew is literally gone, wiped out."
Steve Wilson, Scientific and Natural Area specialist for the DNR in northern Minnesota, visited the island in January and discovered deer were decimating the remaining yew. He knew he needed to take action.
"It's amazing how fast it's happened. When I went back this winter, it was much worse than last summer," Wilson said. "If we don't do something right now, we're going to lose it all."
The DNR plans to build fencing around some remaining stands of yew this summer, and plans are in the works to allow bow hunters to kill deer on the island this fall.
The DNR holds a public hearing Tuesday on the deer-hunting plan.
If a public deer hunt doesn't trim herd numbers, the DNR may move to a more intensive special-permit hunt in 2007. The DNR also may allow hunters to shoot more deer in a broader area around Pokegama Lake.
As a last resort, sharpshooters may be called in to trim deer that are frequenting the island, especially during the winter.
Wilson said the effort to save the yew isn't just an ecological issue.
"Remember that it's the related (Pacific) yew that gave us Taxol," Wilson said of the now-famous chemotherapy drug. "We don't want to lose something and then discover what it might have given us."
"If we don't do something right now, we're going to lose it all."
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