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Originally Posted by bluebird2
(Post 3536812)
That is a very common misconception of the facts. Maintaining low DD for 1-2 decades will not improve the carrying capacity of our forests. The fact is that with a 1% harvest rate the percentage of pole timber will increase while the percentage of saw timber will decrease and as a result the carrying capacity of forest habitat will decrease instead of increasing,
I'm not a forester, and am not familiar with the saw/pole timber terms you used. I'm very confused by your post and would appreciate elaboration. My logic is as follows....In the past (prior to antler restrictions) we had virtually no forest regeneration statewide. That is not argued. By reducing and maintaining low deer densities forest regeneration will increase. As a result of increased hardwood regeneration, nutrition, and therefore the carrying capacity will increase. |
Originally Posted by Cornelius08
(Post 3536859)
If its true that your area has as many deer as you say, then it should be dmapped or whatever else. And if its not being reduced with the bazillion tags as is and cannot be reduced due to extreme access issues etc, Its no excuse to hold the rest of the state at ridiculous unwarranted numbers imho.
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I'm not a forester, and am not familiar with the saw/pole timber terms you used. I'm very confused by your post and would appreciate elaboration. My logic is as follows....In the past (prior to antler restrictions) we had virtually no forest regeneration statewide. That is not argued. That simply is not true. while the PGC has claimed our forests have been severely over browsed since the late 1920's, the amount of forested acreage has increased instead of decreasing. If you don't believe what iI am saying ,just go to the DCNR website and you will see I am right. QUOTE]As a result of increased hardwood regeneration, nutrition, and therefore the carrying capacity will increase.[/QUOTE] The CC capacity of over browsed beech ,birch and striped maple can support 40 DPSM at the MSY CC of the habitat. But, WMU 2g is being managed at 8 DPSM. Does that make sense to you? |
"My logic is as follows....In the past (prior to antler restrictions) we had virtually no forest regeneration statewide."
There is a very big flaw in that logic. The earliest pgc regeneration assessment, I believe, which data was collected from 2001 to 2004 showed only 7 wmus rated as "poor" for regeneration out of the total 22. That can be found on the 2005/06 pgc annual wildlife report, deer section. I also agree with what bb has stated, but he is speaking of the worst areas and not addressing the "statewide" part of your statement. |
Not gonna speak for all Northern tier WMU's but until HR, there was virtually nothing below the browse line in the forested areas of 2F and the very small part of 2G where I hunted. Now those areas are coming back but slowly.
It's also completely meaningless to talk of what a stand of striped maple and beech can support. Few landowners will be willing to let that happen to their forest. Too many hunters forget that without the landowner, many of us will have no place to hunt. We get to hunt many of those forests simply because we are a useful in controlling the herd. That goes for public lands as well, with the exception of Game lands, of course. |
Originally Posted by glew22
(Post 3536894)
I agree whole-heartedly. This is the main reason I suggest managing deer on a smaller scale.
So go ahead and tell us all about how the deer herd is going to be permitted to rebound when the hobblebush flourishes, and all the state's big $ hardwoods aren't nibbled anymore. Like they would allow it, when DD of less than 25 dpsm have been shown to have "unacceptable" levels of browse damage. Talk all about forest health, when it isn't even a mute consideration on your QDM lands. |
Originally Posted by BTBowhunter
(Post 3536940)
It's also completely meaningless to talk of what a stand of striped maple and beech can support. Few landowners will be willing to let that happen to their forest. Too many hunters forget that without the landowner, many of us will have no place to hunt. We get to hunt many of those forests simply because we are a useful in controlling the herd. That goes for public lands as well, with the exception of Game lands, of course. This sums it up very well to me . Its not so much how many deer the forest can handle, its how many deer the non hunting public are going to tolerate doing damage to property and themseves. I also realize deer are not managed for hunter satisfaction. Hunters are a tool in the wildlife management program. These agencys have a good gag going on, they get the tools of the trade to finance the management program. I don't think we will ever see a herd increace, herd stabilizion at the most. There are to many Pa. citizens who couldn't give a rats behind if some hunter doesen't fill his tag. Whats most important to them is they don't have to deal with the deer on a year round basis. |
t's also completely meaningless to talk of what a stand of striped maple and beech can support. Few landowners will be willing to let that happen to their forest. Also, even after having 40 DPSM in the 30s and 70s, we still don't have vast areas of beech birch and striped maple. What we have much higher percentage of saw timber than we should have which results in a lot of areas with no due to a closed canopy, not because of over browsing. |
Originally Posted by bluebird2
(Post 3536908)
That simply is not true. while the PGC has claimed our forests have been severely over browsed since the late 1920's, the amount of forested acreage has increased instead of decreasing. If you don't believe what iI am saying ,just go to the DCNR website and you will see I am right.
QUOTE]As a result of increased hardwood regeneration, nutrition, and therefore the carrying capacity will increase. It makes sense to me.Once the habitat gets degraded as much as it is in 2G,it takes far less deer to continue to impact the habitat.While deer can certainly survive in poor habitat,it makes no sense to increase the population if they're forced to eat indicator species like beech.That proves that other more valuable and more preferred species are getting wiped out.I don't understand why anyone would find that acceptable. 2g certainly averages out to overwinter less deer than most places.However,the deer are not evenly spread out.Huge areas have absolutely pizz poor habitat shouldn't have hardly any deer.Seek out and find the places where deer should actually be and you'll find deer densities far above 8 dpsm. |
t makes sense to me.Once the habitat gets degraded as much as it is in 2G,it takes far less deer to continue to impact the habitat.While deer can certainly survive in poor habitat,it makes no sense to increase the population if they're forced to eat indicator species like beech.That proves that other more valuable and more preferred species are getting wiped out.I don't understand why anyone would find that acceptable. |
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