ClearCreek
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2017
- Messages
- 430
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What is the alternative? Do nothing? Prayer? Wait for a vaccine that may never be developed? Even if a vaccine was developed, how the hell do you innoculate an entire deer or elk herd? Ted Nugent conspiracy theories?To summarize: Hunters should kill as many mature bucks as possible during and after the rut, when they are most vulnerable. Sounds like the CO plan.
I don't now what you would consider a lot of evidence, but there is evidence from CO that more liberal harvest of deer (Red Feather/Poudre Area) reduced CWD prevalence and contributes to prevalence remaining low (Middle Park Area) vs. some other areas of CO which had a 10x increase in prevalence during the same time period. Prevalence in bucks is about 2X that of does and older deer have higher prevalence than younger deer of the same sex. Hence the strategy of increasing harvest of older bucks as they are most likely to be infected.At this point there isn't a lot of evidence to suggest doing something is much better than not.
Hmm. So you believe the same people that manage "the mule deer factory of America" have suddenly become incompetent? Your statement actually made me laugh because CO hunters complain about CPW and the lack of deer in our state just like hunters in other states, the complainers just aren't on HT.I guess I look at CO, they still have deer, in fact they have shitloads of deer and are still considered the Mule Deer Factory of America yet have had CWD for decades.
Wisconsin gave up culling in 2007 due to public outcry (sounds familiar) while Illinois continued culling deer. Pick a trajectory.Had it for a long time, killing deer doesn't get rid of the source of the problem, and as Wisconsin has shown,
The goal of increasing harvest (not killing every deer) is to slow the spread and keep prevalence rates low enough that they are not having population level effects. Colorado has had CWD in the wild for nearly 40 years and prevalence is still increasing in some areas and based on currently available information it will continue. That's the crux, not eliminating the disease.killing all the deer/buck you can still allows it to spread and in the end you don't have any deer, which is the same result you get WITH CWD.
We, as Sportsmen and women, fight to conserve our public lands and the wildlife that reside on it. CWD will eventually, over time, remove that same wildlife that we are fighting to conserve.
Mother Nature can really be a BITCH, when she wants to be!
Hunting Wife....Thanks for the link!
Hmm. So you believe the same people that manage "the mule deer factory of America" have suddenly become incompetent? Your statement actually made me laugh because CO hunters complain about CPW and the lack of deer in our state just like hunters in other states, the complainers just aren't on HT.
Prevalence rate has increased drastically (10X) in some areas since the early 2002's. You are implying the situation has not changed in Colorado and that is certainly not true. We now have units with prevalence rates >30%.
Wisconsin gave up culling in 2007 due to public outcry (sounds familiar) while Illinois continued culling deer. Pick a trajectory.
View attachment 122017
Graph from Manjerovic et. al. 2013. The importance of localized culling in stabilizing chronic wasting disease prevalence in white-tailed deer populations. Preventive Veterinary Medicine.
The goal of increasing harvest (not killing every deer) is to slow the spread and keep prevalence rates low enough that they are not having population level effects. Colorado has had CWD in the wild for nearly 40 years and prevalence is still increasing in some areas and based on currently available information it will continue. That's the crux, not eliminating the disease.
I referenced the WI/IL whitetail data in response to another members post. I agree, a high density resident WT deer population in WI is much different than a combination of resident and migrating populations of WT, MD, Elk and Moose and probably has little bearing on CWD management in WY or CO.Conflicting data?
However, in some southeastern Wyoming mule deer herds where the disease has long been established, CWD prevalence has either somewhat declined from peak levels and/or has remained relatively static, albeit at levels high enough to likely impact population performance. Overall, prevalence tends to be higher in southeastern Wyoming, where the disease has long been established but is quickly becoming more common and widespread in much of the state.
This is the number one problem, anyone that makes the claim that one set of data in regard to CWD and its management is "THE ANSWER", if full of crap. There hasn't been enough long term studies and long term management done to draw conclusions. I also don't think its fair to compare information between states, it may be relevant, it may not be. We don't know what the infection prevalence rates were between Illinois and Wisconsin, deer distribution, deer behavior in regard to contact, genotypes between the two, and a laundry list of other "details" left out. It could be that the comparisons are very good between WI and IL...or it could be a very biased comparison. I'm not against comparisons, but caution should be used when trying to draw conclusions from one state to the next...could be all kinds of mitigating circumstances and what works in one area, may be a disaster in another.
Plus, there's also the fact that you're using whitetailed deer in WI and applying the same concept to mule deer. There are lots of other issues to consider when you start culling or increasing harvest on mule deer. Whitetail are prolific and rebound pretty fast and in WI and IL with a lot less additive mortality than mule deer. When you start thinking about "helping" mule deer by increasing buck harvest and reducing the over-all population by killing does, you better be considering how much bigger of an impact other forms of mortality are going to have on a suppressed population. Lets also not forget that mule deer populations are already in the crapper in much of the West...IMO, it would take a pretty big set of brass balls to implement a sweeping management practice (culling, slamming buck mule deer in the rut, significantly lowering population levels, etc.) across large geographic areas. In particular when nobody knows for sure what the best approach is to do deal with cwd, or even if that approach works at all.
I'm not saying don't try things, but proceed at a rate that allows for the careful study of what you're doing. Be cautious about declaring victory or defeat in those efforts. In my lifetime, I've seen massive mistakes made by jumping to conclusions too fast on buying in, hook-line-and sinker, to fixing complex problems.
No easy answers, but I don't believe for one second we're going to shoot our way out of the CWD problem...aint happening.
In 2019, the recommendations from CPW to the Wildlife Commission was a 7% increase in buck tags and 6% increase in doe tags. Doe tag increases were proposed in units that were at or above objective and not for the purpose of CWD management. The buck tag increase was proposed for units that were at or above objective and/or units that were above the CWD prevalence threshold. I don't have any idea if there will be more proposed increases in 2020 for the purpose of CWD management.How many more deer do they plan on killing and when? The winters may do it for them....
In 2019, the recommendations from CPW to the Wildlife Commission was a 7% increase in buck tags and 6% increase in doe tags. Doe tag increases were proposed in units that were at or above objective and not for the purpose of CWD management. The buck tag increase was proposed for units that were at or above objective and/or units that were above the CWD prevalence threshold. I don't have any idea if there will be more proposed increases in 2020 for the purpose of CWD management.