QDMA Articles :
Poor-Quality Habitat, High Quality Bucks
By: Dave Edwards
It is well known among deer hunters
and managers that nutrition is the key to producing high quality
white-tailed deer. This is especially true in areas such as the
Coastal Plain of Florida where poor soils and high rainfall produce
abundant, but low-quality vegetation. However, many clubs practicing
QDM in this region are realizing that balancing the sex ratio
and protecting young bucks can dramatically improve the quality
of their deer herds. Although most bucks harvested on these properties
fall well short of making the Boone & Crockett record book,
they are exceptional bucks for Florida.
Many clubs also are realizing the importance of increasing the
nutrition available to their herds by providing supplemental feeds
and establishing year-round food plot programs. Despite poor soils
and the realization that an entry in the record books is remote,
many Florida hunters are embracing the QDM philosophy.
The Shadowlawn Experience
One hunting club that helped pave
the way for QDM in Florida is the Shadowlawn Hunt Club in northeast
Florida. Shadowlawn consists of approximately 16,000 acres, located
approximately 45 minutes southwest of Jacksonville. The most dominant
landscapes include slash pine plantations,
longleaf pine/turkey oak sandhills, live oak hammocks, and hardwood
drainages associated with several creeks that traverse the property.
The majority of the property consists of deep, well-drained, sandy
soils. The club has been in existence for over 20 years and has
been enrolled in the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission¹s
antlerless deer tag program since 1986.
Over the past 16 years, deer management practices at Shadowlawn
have changed dramatically. In its early years, Shadowlawn members
harvested any legal buck and few antlerless deer. As the QDM philosophy
spread throughout
the country, some club members began wondering if this approach
would work on Shadowlawn. Like many clubs entering into a QDM
program, buck harvest restrictions were implemented in steps.
In 1992, a 4-point or better rule was implemented; in 1993 a 5-point
rule; and, in 1994, a 6-point rule.
In 1998, the club determined that too many young bucks were still
being harvested. Using antler measurements from prior years, the
club decided to implement an 8-point or better rule. Although
a spread restriction was considered, it was not implemented until
the 2000 season when the club
realized that, as a result of better deer management practices,
too many young 8-pointers were still being taken.
In addition to protecting young bucks, the club also dramatically
increased their antlerless harvest in 1992 and has maintained
an adequate harvest ever since. Shadowlawn currently has a well-balanced
deer herd and harvests nearly as many mature bucks as they did
yearling bucks in the past.
However, these deer management changes did not come easy to club
members. It was common for conversations around the camp to become
heated over whether or not the club was doing the right thing.
During this time, several members
dropped out of the club, while others held on with hopes that
QDM was merely a passing fad that would go away. Without the strong
leadership of club president Pat Keller, Shadowlawn's QDM programs
would have failed.
Today Shadowlawn is one of the best examples of how well QDM can
work on poor-quality habitat. Shadowlawn has effectively balanced
the adult sex ratio and buck age structure, improved fawn production,
and is maintaining the deer herd at a desirable level. Through
their experience, we have learned many valuable lessons about
managing quality deer on poor-quality habitat. It is our hope
that the following lessons will help you better manage your deer
herd and avoid making mistakes that may be fatal to your QDM program.
Setting realistic goals
Setting realistic deer management
goals is critical to the success of a QDM program in poor-quality
habitat. If the land is not capable of producing record-book bucks,
this should not be a goal of your program. Your goal should be
to maximize your deer herd¹s potential. In many areas of
Florida's Coastal Plain, a 3 1/2- or 4 1/2-year-old buck may only
weigh 120 pounds and have a rack that scores 105 B&C points.
If you set your goals on producing 130-class B&C bucks, you
are setting yourself up for disappointment and failure.
Based on Shadowlawn¹s past harvest data, an 8-point or better
antler restriction was implemented to protect bucks less than
3 1/2 years old. After two years of this restriction, Shadowlawn¹s
members became frustrated because their buck expectations were
not being achieved. This resulted in the implementation of a 14-inch
spread restriction to protect bucks less than 4 1/2 years old.
Members were satisfied with the results of this
adjustment.
In such poor-quality habitat, it was simply taking bucks longer
to produce quality antlers. Had we known this from the start,
we could have reduced the "waiting period" by protecting
these bucks from the beginning. Because Shadowlawn took such a
slow approach, it took 8 years to get the buck age structure to
the desired level. Fawn production will also be lower on poor
quality habitats. At Shadowlawn, where the deer density and sex
ratio is balanced, the fetal production has peaked out at 1.5
fetuses per doe. At first, we hoped to increase production to
closer to 2 fetuses per doe, but later realized we had maximized
the herd¹s reproductive potential given the habitat.
Again, club members began to get frustrated because they had worked
hard to reduce the deer density and improve the sex ratio, but
were still not getting the reproduction they expected. This is
where collecting accurate harvest, reproductive, and observation
data really paid off. The data showed that the club had indeed
significantly improved the sex ratio and fawn production, but
still needed an extra "kick" to reach its goals. Nutrition
was the next piece of the "quality equation" where we
concentrated our efforts.
Nutrition
The largest constraint on a QDM program in a poor-quality habitat
is nutrition. Nutrition controls herd condition, fawn production,
and antler quality. Understanding the relationship between habitat
quality and its effects on your deer herd will dictate the potential
of your program. An analogy I often use to help hunters understand
this relationship is putting 50, 200-pound men in the back of
a lettuce truck and leaving themthere for a month. Record their
average weight. Then, remove 49 men and leave the remaining one
for another month. Do you think he is going to gain weight? No.
If you put those same men in the back of a steak truck what kind
of results would you expect?
The same holds true for deer. You cannot expect a deer herd on
poor-quality habitat, even under ideal conditions, to be as productive
as deer herds in excellent habitat. If your biologist feels you
are getting the most out of your herd based on your habitat quality
and deer density, you may consider implementing a food plot or
supplemental feeding program for
additional gains.
Although Shadowlawn feeds corn through the year, we didn¹t
feel this was making a significant difference in herd quality.
To take their program to the next level, the club is planning
to beef-up their food plot program and implement a supplemental
feeding program. Keep in mind that this club is currently producing
120 to 130-class bucks by simply managing buck age structure.
This is exceptional for this area and proof that their QDM program
is working. It is worth mentioning that habitat quality can vary
from property to property even in a relatively small area. I know
of several properties that produce better quality bucks and have
a higher fawn production than their neighbors, even under similar
management practices. Consulting your local wildlife biologist
is one of the best ways to get some insight as to what you should
expect on your property.
The Slow Approach
All too often hunters elect to take
the slow approach to QDM. If your goal is to produce bucks with
eight or more antler points and spreads of 14 inches or more,
you need to protect all bucks that do not meet these criteria
from the beginning. This is particularly true in poor-quality
habitats where getting bucks to this quality requires more time.
On Shadowlawn, bucks do not reach this quality until at least
4 1/2 years old. Starting off slow often delays expectations of
club members and leads to "QDM isn¹t working" attitudes.
Even with rigid harvest restrictions, it takes time for young
bucks to progress into older age classes and for hunters to begin
noticing a significant improvement in the number of mature bucks
present.
Starting off slow also means that it will take that much longer
to achieve your management goals. This theory also applies to
antlerless harvest. If one of your objectives is to balance the
sex ratio and reduce deer density, then do so from the start.
Many clubs do not harvest enough does to effectively change the
sex ratio. If you are taking does, but not seeing a difference,
you are not taking enough. This often leads to frustration and
sometimes failure of your deer management program. Camera surveys
and hunter observation cards are excellent ways to monitor both
the herd's sex ratio and hunt quality.
Although total buck harvest often suffers during the first year
or two of aggressive antler restrictions and increased doe harvest,
it more than pays for itself once the sex ratio, buck quality,
and deer density are balanced. Shadowlawn took the "slow
road" to QDM, but was lucky enough to have good leadership
during the progression.
Hunting Strategies
Regardless of where you hunt, mature
bucks are tougher to harvest than yearling bucks. This was a difficult
point to convey to Shadowlawn members once we started getting
bucks into the mature age classes. In Florida, hunting over bait
is legal. Shadowlawn members were used to sitting over a feeder
and, for years, killed the majority of their deer this way. After
the first few years of rigid antler restrictions, buck harvest
was low and hunter frustration was high. Shadowlawn¹s QDM
program was at a crossroads. From a biologist¹s standpoint,
the QDM program was working. The woods were full of rutting activity
and mature buck sign, the sex ratio was much improved, fawn production
was up, and antler restrictions were protecting young bucks from
harvest. With 16,000 acres to work with, we knew that the majority
of the bucks were still alive.
My first thought was that we had implemented antler restrictions
that were protecting nearly every buck on the property, even mature
bucks. Club members were not happy. As a last resort, club president
Pat Keller set up a few infrared cameras. Not only were the bucks
there, they were big! QDM was indeed working. There were many
bucks that exceeded the 8-point and 14-inch spread restrictions.
This quieted members' complaints, but why were they unable to
kill any of these bucks? The answer was that members were still
hunting over feeders. They were seeing plenty of deer, but no
shooters. Every now and then someone would luck up and harvest
a mature buck checking a feeder for does during the rut. Members
soon learned that mature bucks were much harder to kill than the
yearling bucks they were used to shooting over bait.
Once members began hunting near swamps, clear-cuts, and other
thick cover such as pine plantations and briar patches, they started
harvesting mature bucks.
Here's one of the keys to harvesting mature bucks that I bet none
of you knew -hunt during the rut! Shadowlawn harvests nearly 90
percent of their mature bucks during the rut. Mature bucks are
most vulnerable during this time. Shadowlawn's QDM program could
have easily failed if the members had not changed their hunting
strategies. If you have been practicing QDM and are not sure it
is working, throw a few cameras in the woods. Chances are that
the bucks are there, you just have not figured out a way to out-smart
them yet.
Without question, QDM works even on poor-quality habitats. However,
putting a program in place can be very challenging, even for experienced
deer managers. Having a successful QDM program on poor-quality
habitat requires keeping accurate harvest, reproductive, and observation
data and lots of patience. Deer on poor quality habitat rarely
respond in "text book" fashion. Consequently, you must
rely on your data to dictate management strategies.
Keep in mind that there is no "cookie cutter" recipe
for managing for quality deer herds on poor-quality habitat. Every
property is different and every property has its own set of unique
challenges. You must fine-tune your management practices to meet
the needs of your deer herd. Setting realistic goals and understanding
the role habitat quality plays in your deer herd are also vital
to the success of your QDM program. While it is always good to
set high goals, keep them realistic. Remember, every state doesn¹t
produce deer like Illinois or Wisconsin. With proper management
and confident leadership, you can produce a high-quality deer
herd with a balanced sex ratio, increased fawn production, and
many mature bucks, even under challenging habitat conditions.
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