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Development in Eastern Sierra threatens the mule deer herd.

wyomuley

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Dec 30, 2004
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Location
Buffalo, Wyoming
Losing ground?
Development in Eastern Sierra threatens the mule deer herd, biologists say.

By Martin Griffith, Special to The Times


Mike Dobel is worried. A biologist with the Nevada Department of Wildlife, Dobel charts mule deer populations in California and Nevada, and he doesn't like what he sees.

Development running along the backside of the Sierra Nevada, a 300-mile section of U.S. 395 running between Bishop and Susanville, appears to have compromised the deer's habitat and may threaten the future of the herd. The problem is especially acute in and around Reno, where about 13,000 deer live.

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"The three most important factors for deer? Habitat, habitat, habitat," Dobel says. "It's almost a 1-to-1 ratio between habitat loss and deer loss. For every 1% of habitat you lose, you lose 1% of deer."

Winter is the most challenging time for the herd, which heads up slope in summer and down in winter, foraging for sagebrush, bitterbrush and other shrubs for food, shelter and protection from predators. Last January during the severe winter storms, 100 deer were struck and killed after straying onto highways in the region, and others ended up wandering into downtown Reno.

Some biologists estimate that 60% to 80% of deer habitat has been lost along the fast-growing front between Mono and Lassen counties.

During the 1950s and 1960s, the region had at least six to eight times more deer than it currently does, Dobel says.

Further declines can be expected as development zooms north and south of Reno.

The Eastern Sierra herds are the latest to be affected by growth pressures in the West. Mule deer also are being squeezed out by development along Utah's Wasatch Range and Colorado's Front Range.

Other factors have contributed to their sharp decline across the West, including wildfires, drought and a change in habitat due to the incursion of nonnative grasses.

The deer, named for their mule-like ears, inhabit a diverse terrain ranging from mountains to plains. They tend to be bigger and more muscular than white-tailed deer.

When Craig Stowers, California Department of Fish and Game deer program coordinator, considers the plight of the deer in the state, his language is sharp, turning on government officials who don't "give a damn" about deer when making land-use decisions.

"To me, it's all about money," Stowers said. "When push comes to shove, the money wins out. Nothing impacts deer numbers like habitat. Provide enough and they'll be fine."

But Jim Galloway, a commissioner in Washoe County, counters that officials work closely with developers to cluster development that saves habitat.

"I don't blame [biologists] for being frustrated, but their statements that we don't care about wildlife are outdated," he says.

The 10,000-member Mule Deer Foundation based in Reno is trying to restore land and improve areas where deer forage. Because soaring land costs rule out buying private property or fighting development projects in court that could save critical habitat, the foundation's efforts include reseeding after wildfires and removing older shrubs to make way for newer growth.

"We look at it pragmatically and try to maximize habitat for deer," says Mark Smith, a biologist with the foundation. "It'll help every other plant and animal species if you do it right."

The fate of Eastern Sierra herds primarily hinges on land-use decisions by local elected officials, says Chris Healy, spokesman for the Nevada wildlife department.

"No one entity is in charge of the land," Healy says. "That's why it's difficult to protect habitat and prevent its fragmentation. Plus, private land issues are held close to the heart in the West."

But according to Gerald Lent of the Nevada Hunters Assn., government officials can help by building more wildlife corridors such as freeway tunnels for deer and charging developers higher impact fees for new projects. Tunnels are an effective, if costly, measure to help migrating deer safely reach destinations.

"When developers destroy habitat, they have an obligation to do something about it," Lent says. "They should be required to buy other land for deer" with habitat mitigation fees.
 
"When developers destroy habitat, they have an obligation to do something about it," Lent says. "They should be required to buy other land for deer" with habitat mitigation fees."

What about when lazy slobs on ATVs destroy habitat Dr Lent ?

This is the guy who thinks restricting ATVs to existing roads is discriminatory , a real champion for the plight of mule deer .
 
"""the plight of the deer in the state, his language is sharp, turning on government officials who don't "give a damn" about deer when making land-use decisions.

"To me, it's all about money," Stowers said. "When push comes to shove, the money wins out. Nothing impacts deer numbers like habitat. Provide enough and they'll be fine." """

93% federal land Nevada and the deer are being wiped out. What's wrong with that management plan?
 
Tom ,
The 395 corridor between Bishop & Susanville is mostly private , maybe you could come up here and explain to the deer that there's plenty of federal land to the east .
 
Screwy spring weather- pouring again the last two days but is supposed to be back at the 90 degree mark on Sunday...
 
The deer would rather be on private land where they die, than the federal land to the east? What's wrong with the federal land?
 
Tom,
I will have to check my map, but the new bird was discovered 2000 miles from Nevada, and the new rat was 10,000 miles from Nevada. Likely because the Public Lands in Nevada managed by Dubya are struggling to support even a native Mule Deer due to all the Fat-Assed ATV riders and assorted "supporters" of Dubya....
 
We've got to many deer here, he used to be governor here. Its not him, is it? We have ATV riders here, its not them. What's wrong with the federal land to the east? Its not as good or what, lousy management has got to be part of it for sure, I'll agree with that, but that system started a long time ago? Dubya didn't make this happen in Nevada, did he? I don't believe that ATV people made it happen there, I think its lack of Nevada incentive for habitat maybe. Is there any incentive to improve the habitat there, either federal or private? That's what they say is messed up, the habitat is being ruined for the deer, no incentive to fix it, that's what it sounds like.
 
Tom, I'm sure all of Nevada isn't the same, as far as habitat, feed, water, etc. The deer are in the Sierra range for some reason, probably because that's where the water is. But they can't stay there all winter because of the snow. Just because deer don't migrate in Texas doesn't mean they don't elsewhere.
 
So, what's the incentive for them to be able to migrate there? That's the problem, maybe. They need some migration corridors, but the local cheap Nevada tag doesn't pay for it, right? The feds. don't collect for it, right? The state doesn't reward landowners for providing it, right? What's the problem there?
 
"Tom,
I will have to check my map, but the new bird was discovered 2000 miles from Nevada, and the new rat was 10,000 miles from Nevada. Likely because the Public Lands in Nevada managed by Dubya are struggling to support even a native Mule Deer due to all the Fat-Assed ATV riders and assorted "supporters" of Dubya...."

LOL Jose, What a clown.
Spoken like a true treehugging ass kissing Clinton lover.
With all the development going in ,I doubt that even if they banned ATV's the muledeer would come back in the number's they used to be.


Its the whole population explosion ( what the hell you can point the finger at Moosie)LOL
and people wanting to live build in the best winter habit.

Look at our own foothills and the winter range , it looks like more of the rich man building big houses on the best winter range then any fat assed ATV rider ripping trashing it.


Maybe some of that finger pointing should be directed at the way fish and game has managed for Elk and not given alot of thought to muledeer.
Then we have your wolves you support so much ,sharing the small amount of winter range thats left ,it's no wonder the muledeer are on a decline.
It's usually not as easy as pointing the finger at one group.


Tom, it's a whole host of problems.
People building on good winter range,more people using the highways ,more people using the land in general.
Out here it all depends on winter range and what it will support, it usually gets to much snow up high for the animals to be able to make a living,so they migrate down to what used to be there winter range only to find more houses,more highways,more people.
As the rancher gets run off of federal land (by the greenie/treehugger Jon Marvel types)they tend to sell the primary ranch land to a developer so more of the rich greenie treehugger/Jon Marvel lovers can build there big houses.
 
Tom said:
The deer would rather be on private land where they die, than the federal land to the east? What's wrong with the federal land?
Tom ,
I got an idear , why dont ya git a bunch a good ol Texis fellers like yurself and come up hear an round up them critters and drive em on over to that there federally land to the east , that'd be rite neighberly of ya'll .
 
The Eastern Sierra is primo muley habitat. In vertical order it goes from above timberline, pine forests, quakey and oak pockets, down to rolling sage and pinion, to sage. All of it habitat during the during the different seasons.

It's an issue because that's where 80% of the Northern Nevada human population lives. During the winter, the deer are highly visible and people really get fired up when they see a ribby doe kicking it's last after a March storm.

Lot's of very good habitat to the east on BLM land and lot's of deer. Just not as visible. The 395 corridor will continue to expand, much like the Boise Front or the Wasatch. The deer will dwindle in numbers overall, but will thrive in small pockets of private, unhuntable land. I don't see a way to curb the expanse.

Other issues are grazing leases on the BLM land, wild horses, and of course the ATV's.

I think in the Granite range, the horses are way more destructive than any other factor IMO.

The ATV's are a real problem as it seems getting on an ATV makes a person an illiterate dumbass that can't read "NO MOTORIZED VEHICLES". Especially during the fragile wintering season.

I lived in Reno for 3 years and was amazed at the quality of animals and chukar hunting that could be had a mere 30 minutes from my front door. It only required some vertical foot work.
 
What T-Bone said and then some.....but Tom, I'm not a Bush basher (well..except around the house that is ;) ) but you aren't/can't be serious about hooking him up to finding a rat half-way around the world are you?

...and too many deer in Texas?, definately the Republicans fault. I think it due to all the well-heads pumping the deer to the surface.....
 
Marv, right, I'm just striking back a little for people who blame stuff on Bush that he didn't cause, but is dealing with, thanks for not being a Bush basher.

I think everybody ought to plant a bunch of those sage and bitter plants, etc. Charge people $50, for a deer tag, instead of $25 and plant a few plants for the deer in the winter time stress. Why don't they do that?

We put out the food plots and corn feeders for stress times, we got lots of deer, that kind of idea. Habitat for wildlife, do it, if they have any value to you at all.
 
Tom, they can't raise deer tags to $50 because too many people think everything should be provided to them for next to nothing, and they don't care about how much wildlife habitat could be improved with the extra dollars. Maybe it's time for the game departments in the west to start a little education campaign.
 
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