QDMA Articles :
Buck Movements and Mortality: Limitations in QDM Programs
By: Bronson Strickland and Dr. Stephen
Demarais
Quality Deer Management (QDM) is an
increasingly popular management strategy with today's landowners
and hunters. QDM typically involves protection of young bucks
coupled with an adequate harvest of antlerless deer to produce
the desired herd size, age structure, and sex ratio. However,
some landowners and hunters become frustrated with QDM after several
seasons because they have not seen or harvested significantly
older bucks than under previous management. In many cases, expectations
exceed the ability of the management area to produce the desired
number of older bucks. Additionally, many landowners and hunters
do not understand how buck movements and mortality factors can
limit the number of young bucks they are passing as yearlings
from reaching the older age classes. In this article we will review
how buck mortality, dispersal, and home range size may impact
the success of your QDM program.
Mortality
The annual mortality rate for a deer herd is simply the percentage
of the population that dies in a given year. Mortality can be
attributed to hunting, poaching, predators, weather, disease,
malnutrition, vehicle collisions, etc. Mortality rates vary by
sex and age of deer and by season and region of the United States
(Table 1). Understanding the most common sources of mortality
in your area and the percentage of bucks lost to these sources
will help you refine your management strategies.
Legal harvest is a significant source of mortality in most areas,
and is controlled with regulations and hunter selectivity. Illegal
harvest, on the other hand, is not easily controlled and has not
been quantified, but is assumed to be substantial. In most of
the Southeast, legal and illegal harvest account for most of the
annual buck mortality.
Populations near the northern and southern boundaries of the whitetail's
range have the highest reported nonhunting mortality. In
these regions, up to 25 percent of all bucks may be killed annually
by predators. Coyotes, wolves, and black bears have been reported
predators of whitetails in the North, whereas, coyotes and mountain
lions are the prominent predators in the Southwest.
The Southeast no longer has viable
populations of large predators such as wolves and mountain lions
that are capable of killing adult deer. Coyotes and bobcats are
about the only significant predators of whitetails in the Southeast,
and they mostly take fawns and adults that are sick or injured.
Most healthrelated mortality
in the Southeast can be attributed to two causeshemorrhagic
disease and malnutritionparasitism syndrome. Hemorrhagic
disease (also known as bluetongue) viruses can kill up to 50 percent
of a deer herd, although mortality rates are typically less than
15 percent. Deer populations in the South are confronted with
these viruses much more frequently than their northern counterparts
and have developed some immunity. Deer populations in northern
latitudes may only encounter the disease every 510 years
and suffer much higher mortality rates.
Malnutritionparasitism syndrome
is generally associated with highdensity deer populations
where the habitat has been chronically overbrowsed or where populations
occur on very poor quality habitats. Nutritional stress makes
deer much more vulnerable to both internal and external parasite
infestations. Primary internal parasites include the large stomach
worm and lungworm. Major external parasites include ticks and
keds (deer lice). High deer densities can increase the transmission
of these parasites to other deer. Actual mortality rates vary
by parasite species and age and health of deer.
Legal and illegal hunting are usually the most important mortality
factors in the Southeast. In comparison, legal hunting, weather,
and predation are probably the most important in the North and
Southwest. Table 1 details
numerous whitetail mortality studies throughout North America.
Dispersal
Dispersal is the process of an animal moving from its point of
origin to where it reproduces. Most animals exhibit some form
of dispersal to ensure exchange of individuals over time. Dispersal
of bucks to and from your property can significantly impact the
success of your management plan.
Reported dispersal rates vary from
40 percent in Virginia to 70 percent of bucks 818 months
old in Maryland. Researchers in Maryland found that the number
of yearling bucks dispersing onto their property was much lower
than the number of yearling bucks dispersing from their property.
This resulted in an annual net loss of yearling bucks. They suspected
the reason for unequal dispersal was the intense harvest pressure
from neighboring properties.
Legal harvest is typically the most
significant factor limiting the success of QDM programs. Research
in Mississippi demonstrated that the most significant cause of
buck mortality was legal harvest. Clearly, control of legal harvest
is required for a successful QDM program. Properties less than
several thousand acres also must rely on cooperation from neighboring
hunters.
Home Range Size
Home range is simply the area that an animal travels during its
normal activities and is estimated during specific time periods
(e.g., breeding or annual home range). Whitetail home range size
varies by sex, age, and habitat type. Home range sizes of bucks
throughout the United States are listed in Table 2. The average
annual home range size for females is around 300600 acres.
The average annual home range for bucks is probably 24 times
larger (6002400 acres), and older bucks generally have larger
home ranges than younger bucks.
Management Implications
We will use some hypothetical examples to illustrate how movement
and mortality factors can affect the number of bucks on your property
and, thus, the success of your QDM program. Suppose you are managing
a 5,000acre property with a deer density of 1 deer per 16
acres. If the adult buck to adult doe ratio is 1:2 and the annual
fawn survival is 80 percent, you should have around 83 buck fawns
alive at the beginning of the hunting season. Now we will evaluate
the effects of natural mortality and harvest on these 83 buck
fawns, and calculate how many would survive to maturity.
(Figure 1) Line 1 represents the effect that a 10 percent annual
natural mortality rate would have on this group, with only 73
percent (61 of 83) surviving to 3.5 years old and 60 percent (50
of 83) surviving to 5.5 years old. Line 2 represents the effect
of a 10 percent annual natural mortality rate and a 30 percent
annual legal harvest. Only 25 percent (21 of 83) would survive
to 3.5 years old and only 10 percent (8 of 83) would survive to
5.5 years of age with this combination. Line 3 represents the
effect of a 10 percent annual natural mortality rate, a 30 percent
annual legal harvest, and a 10 percent annual illegal harvest.
Only 13 percent (10 of 83) would survive to 3.5 years while only
4 percent (3 of 83) survive to 5.5 with this scenario. Now imagine
how these figures would change if you included unequal dispersal
rates off and onto your property.

Now let us use the information on
home range size to see how it could impact harvest levels on your
property. If you have a 100acre tract of land, no deer will
be totally protected given the average home range size of over
600 acres. Let us look at another example, with a 5,000acre
tract (Figure 2). The box represents a property boundary and the
circles represent the home ranges of deer. You can see that most
of the deer could be vulnerable to harvest on surrounding properties.
As the size of the management unit increases, the number of bucks
that can be protected within the management unit also increases.
Property
size and harvest intensity on peripheral properties can have a
big impact on the success of your management plan.
Another source of frustration for
hunters can come from differences in the susceptibility of bucks
to harvest. The absence of older aged bucks in the harvest can
lead hunters to believe that these animals are not present in
the herd. Often older bucks do not expose themselves to hunters
during daylight hours with about the only harvest opportunities
occurring during the rut. Therefore, it is possible these older
aged bucks are present but are not being harvested.
Conclusions
We hope the information provided in this article will assist you
in understanding some of the factors that can affect the success
of your QDM program. Local harvest rates, natural mortality rates,
dispersal rates, and home range size all can play an important
role in the success or failure of a plan. Landowners and hunters
must have goals and expectations that are reasonable given these
limitations. The degree to which a QDM program works is dependent
on these and many other factors. Consultation with a biologist
from your specific region about these considerations can help
you finetune your management program and increase your chances
of success.
Bronson Strickland is a Research Associate
in wildlife biology at Mississippi State University. Dr. Stephen
Demarais is an Associate Professor of Wildlife Management at Mississippi
State University. This is Bronson's first contribution to Quality
Whitetails.
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