Whitetail Deer Management
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Written By - Mike Guerin - 05/22/2007 |
Link to Original Article
here
Deer management is a multifaceted endeavor, envolving harvest
management, habitat management etc. Professional land managers are
trained on these subjects. But for do-it-yourselfers, managing your own
land effectively doesn't mean you need a Masters in wildlife biology.
There are a few basic concepts that you need to understand and
they really aren't that complicated or hard to grasp. This article will
deal with one of the concepts. The law put forth by a European
scientist's named Liebig. The law he defined is known as Liebig's Law
of the Minimum.
What this law states is that the rarest requirement of an organism will be the limiting factor to its performance.
As an example a crop's yield is restricted by the lack of a
single element, in this case lets suppose the soil is low in Nitrogen,
adding more phosphorus will not improve the crops yeild. Once the soil
has nitrogen added crop yield will increase until another element
becomes the limiting factor. And no further improvement in yield is
possible until more of that element is made available.
This same concept can be applied to a deer herd as well as to
the original concept of nutrients for plants. Your deer herd also has a
limiting factor. Something that is keeping it from reaching its
potential. That potential is defined by you. It could be deer weight,
antler development or simple deer numbers. Whatever your goals
successfully improving your deer herd depends on identifying what your
limiting factor happens to be.
Sounds simple enough but this critical step is often ignored
by the lay land manager and results in needless expenditure of money
and effort or inconvenience. It may help to give some examples of
common mistakes that are made so that you can more easily avoid making
them yourself.
One very common mistake is the assumption that genetics in an
area are poor and quality bucks are not a realistic goal. Certainly
some areas have better genetics than others. Antler and body size in
general get better or bigger the further North you go. This often leads
people to set their sites low and never address the true problem. It is
amazing how the areas that are most commonly attributed with poor
genetics also coincide with poor soil and/or have very heavy hunting
pressure.
By not recognizing the true cause of the small deer in this
situation the problem is never adequately address and a solution is
never found. If soil is the problem you can take steps to improve the
quality of the available forage by planting food plots and maybe
reducing the deer herd. With proper lime and fertilizer the soil can be
improved, the lacking nutrients can be supplemented and deer herd can
be significantly improved.
Or if hunting pressure is the limiting factor steps can be
taken to correct the harvest. A more managed and controlled harvest can
improve the numbers and age structure of the herd and make significant
strides in producing a better quality deer herd.
Another example of how not identifying the limiting factor can
be harmful is soil pH. Not identifing what the limiting factor is with
your soils is a very common problem. And this can hurt your deer herd
via the lack of better quality food plots.
Low pH soils can cause you to waste lots of money on
fertilizers that will end up simply getting washed away by the rain.
Low pH prevents plants from utilizing the available nutrients. Low pH
soils greatly reduce the effectiveness of fertilizers. Often cutting
the effectiveness of it by more than half. Fertilizer expense can be
significant and you certainly don't want buy twice what you really need
or waste half of what you did buy and still have your plants not
produce the forage they should.
But what if the limiting factor of you land is out of your
control? Suppose surrounding land owners allow the harvesting of deer
in a manner that is counter to your goals. If that is the case then you
will still be helped by having that knowledge. You could try to get
them to adopt quality deer management practices themselves or maybe if
that isn't possible. You can still put that knowledge to work by
determining you need to hunt somewhere else.
Whatever your limiting factor is, identifing it is the first
step toward improving your hunting success and reaching your hunting
goals. Sure you can start changing parts on that broken car and you
might get lucky and change the broken part first. But knowing what the
problem is before you begin to change parts can save you alot of
headache and money. So make an effort to identify just what the
limiting factor is for your deer and then do whatever is feasible to
improve it. Your deer will thank you.