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Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: jlbuc10] #1620342
01/21/16 11:06 AM
01/21/16 11:06 AM
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Originally Posted By: jlbuc10

Originally Posted By: Matt Brock
For those of you saying that a limit reduction wouldn't equate to more turkeys, well that makes no sense. Are gobblers not turkeys? Yes they are. More gobblers=more turkeys.

I already said this and everyone told me I was wrong. Bet they won't say the same to you


Our made up numbers said 0.5%. I'll even give you a whopping 1%. Again, all males.

So - you got us - that's more turkeys.

But we are talking about increasing poult production to increase populations by 15 - 20%, and maybe up to 50% increases where needed. PCP and Gobbler have been all over it with their statements and I'm just trying to support that theory.

Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: poorcountrypreacher] #1620377
01/21/16 11:27 AM
01/21/16 11:27 AM
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Owassa, AL
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When I killed my first Alabama gobbler in 1985, the limit was 6. For a long while now the limit has been 5 gobblers...Do we have more birds now ? I don't thinks so.

we talk about poult mortality from predators, equally the mortality on nesting hens by predators has to be considered.

Look up and read Speake's work on turkey populations and predator control...way back in the early 80's


WAR EAGLE !!!
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: ] #1620379
01/21/16 11:28 AM
01/21/16 11:28 AM
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Montgomery / Luverne
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Originally Posted By: Matt Brock


By lowering a limit from 5 birds to 3, approximately 10-12% of birds would be saved each year.


Matt, can you go into a little further detail on this statement? When you say a 10-12 percent saving in birds, are you talking about the turkey population as a whole, or just gobblers? If turkey's 4 and or 5 represent 10-12% of the total gobbler kills in a season, then there are a lot more people limiting out, or killing 4 gobblers than I ever would have guessed. Can you go into any detail as to what percentage of hunters kill 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 birds according to your studies?

Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: poorcountrypreacher] #1620382
01/21/16 11:31 AM
01/21/16 11:31 AM
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Spanish Fort
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Matt to be honest i just find it hard to believe that there are enough hens killed by "accident" to amount to any real detrimental numbers.


The moving of the season dates makes more sense to me. Minus the part about it saving the lives of more hens.

Regardless im glad we atleast have someone like you looking into it.


Turkeys be damned.
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: poorcountrypreacher] #1620385
01/21/16 11:34 AM
01/21/16 11:34 AM
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Thanks for the input Matt. I for one am very glad we have forward thinking biologist like you working on the problems at hand. I think you have shown hard data why the season might need to be shortened or the bait limit changed.



The Spirit of God has made me; the breath of the Almighty gives me life.
Job 33:4
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: poorcountrypreacher] #1620386
01/21/16 11:36 AM
01/21/16 11:36 AM
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I would be more ok with shifting, or modifying the season than to make a sharp cut from a 5 to 3 bird limit. So I'm ok with the voodoo model I reckon.

Also - I can't be accused of living in the past. I've posted some long posts about how a shift in our view of turkey habitat is long past due. The perceived ideal habitat published widely 30-40 years ago, and still quoted today, is just not true anymore.

Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: poorcountrypreacher] #1620389
01/21/16 11:38 AM
01/21/16 11:38 AM

M
Matt Brock
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Matt Brock
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I've got to go to a meeting that will last well into the evening. I'll be back tomorrow.

Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: poorcountrypreacher] #1620468
01/21/16 12:31 PM
01/21/16 12:31 PM
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Tuscumbia, AL
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Tuscumbia, AL
Pro lowering limit and season here: I know will get blasted but glad to see a few think like me... Only point I want to chime in on...

Using yalls numbers, 400k turkeys statewide.. Did they all just appear at once? No several years of multiple things increasing the population ....

So it isn't just 2000 gobblers.. It's 4000, 6000,.....10000 in just five years... Just saying

Last edited by QUAKENTIMBER; 01/21/16 12:32 PM.
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: poorcountrypreacher] #1620476
01/21/16 12:36 PM
01/21/16 12:36 PM
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Tuscumbia, AL
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If it's 50/50 ratio on gobblers to hens, (which it's not but I've read that it is) ...10000 gobblers would increase the overall gobbler population by 5 percent... I think that's pretty good increase over 5 years... Just would keep getting better....

Yes along with better habitat, predator reduction etc.

Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: jlbuc10] #1620523
01/21/16 01:07 PM
01/21/16 01:07 PM
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Montgomery / Luverne
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Originally Posted By: jlbuc10

Originally Posted By: Matt Brock
For those of you saying that a limit reduction wouldn't equate to more turkeys, well that makes no sense. Are gobblers not turkeys? Yes they are. More gobblers=more turkeys.

I already said this and everyone told me I was wrong. Bet they won't say the same to you


I'm afraid y'all can't see the forest for the trees with this argument. Those additional gobblers spared by lowering the limit or shortening the season represent an non-significant increase to the population. Gobblers do nothing to increase populations other than breed hens. I've never hunted anywhere in the state where I felt that there were too few gobblers to successfully breed all the hens.

If you want to increase populations, protect hens, improve nesting habitat, and declare war on predators. Those are the controllable factors. The most significant factor of all is weather though. Weather is the largest determining factor of nesting success from year to year, and that is going to ebb and flow like all things in nature.

Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: poorcountrypreacher] #1620531
01/21/16 01:14 PM
01/21/16 01:14 PM
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East Alabama
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If they changed the season dates, which would work, move it to an April start, or shut it down earlier?
I know in Georgia their season runs into the middle of May. I don't see how they don't disturb alot of hens, but they sure do seem to have alot more birds than some places I hunt in Alabama.

Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: poorcountrypreacher] #1620553
01/21/16 01:27 PM
01/21/16 01:27 PM
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Can anybody answer these for me.

What would be the carrying capacity, generally speaking, of the state?

Where are we in terms of excess capacity, or lack there of?

Wouldn't reducing limits without predator control or habitat enhancement just give you well fed predators or a stressed population. Or can the current habitat structure in the state handle a large population increase.

Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: QUAKENTIMBER] #1620577
01/21/16 01:41 PM
01/21/16 01:41 PM
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Sylacauga, AL
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Matt, again thanks for posting. One post seemed mainly addressed to me; hope you don't mind me cutting and pasting what you said so I can address your points in a way that all know what I'm referring to.

>>>>PCP, more people kill a 5 bird limit than your estimate. I'll just leave it right there.<<<<

I didn't make up the 2% figure I used. It was given to me by a state employee who had access to the hunter survey. Maybe he didn't have all the info at the time. I know you aren't to blame, but at a time when the state is apparently planning to make drastic changes in our turkey hunting, it is really concerning to me that this info is deliberately being covered up by the state. This one decision made by somebody has caused me to lose a lot of the good will I had built up toward the department in over 50 years of hunting. Tax money financed this research; why on earth is it covered up? I guess that's a rhetorical question; I sure don't expect an answer from anyone.

>>>Turkey24/7 and PCP, since you like to support AU so much, and the words of wisdom that have come from their research for the last several decades.....
There is currently a model we are using that I am not smart enough to understand nor explain.<<<

And then you reference the kind of computer model that is used for the climate change hysteria. I'm not smart enough to understand it either, but I know the outputs of any computer program depend on the inputs, and the inputs are a human decision. And there are plenty of eggheads at Auburn like any university; that's where I first got to know the type. wink

>>>Shifting seasons or shortening/lengthening them has far more consequence than you might think. Enough so, that poult production and recruitment can be impacted positively or negatively depending on the change in season structure.<<<

I'm not going to dispute this, I just wonder how? Is the number of hens killed by hunters the cause? Is it hunters disturbing the nests and causing them to abandon them? If you still have plenty of gobblers in an area all the way thru the end of turkey season, then how can the gobblers have anything to do with poult recruitment? If they somehow do, why isn't there an effort by the state to educate the hunters on it? At least some of us will try to do the right thing if we know what it is. I need something more than just being told that a computer model predicts it if I'm going to change what I'm doing.

>>>Whether you like it or not, there are thousands upon thousands more turkey hunters in AL than there was a decade ago. And even more than two decades ago. <<<

Well, let's look at some facts and see if that really is true whether I like it or not:

2014-60,000 licensed turkey hunters; 42,000 killed.
2004 - 57,000 hunters; 53,000 killed.
1994 - 47,000 hunters; 40,000 killed.
1984 - 38,000 hunters, 37,000 killed.
1975 - 30,000 hunters; 20,000 killed.

I guess it is technically accurate to say there are thousands upon thousands more hunters now than a decade ago, but that's an unusual way to describe 3000. In the past 40 years the number of hunters has doubled, but so has the harvest. Look at the actual results and you will see that we have averaged very close to one bird per hunter for the past 40 years, and that's as far back as the survey goes. And since 1982, it has never been below .6 and never been above 1.1

http://www.outdooralabama.com/sites/default/files/20132014HunterHarvestSurvey.pdf

I just don't see the crisis here. I see a system that has worked extremely well, except in areas that apparently just won't support turkeys.

>>>Ya'll are basing your opinions on research that was conducted 35-50 years ago, when NOBODY hunted turkeys<<<

I think the info I posted refutes the idea that nobody hunted turkeys. Much of north AL didn't even have turkeys in the 70s and 80s. The fact that hunter numbers have increased since then could only be expected. The fact the harvest has risen with the hunter numbers sure looks to me like the system put in place long ago has worked extremely well, and far better than the "enlightened" systems of other states.

>>>Not making a change is foolish.<<<

Well, there we have it. Matt knows what is going on, so it is apparently already decided. I am obviously wasting my time by trying to promote the AL system that has worked so well for so long. I'm near the end of my turkey hunting career, so it won't have much effect on me. When you younger guys are my age and hoping you can draw a tag so you can turkey hunt the next season, I hope you can still remember the good ole days. If you doubt me, just check the regs in Wisconsin. They have nearly as many turkeys as we do, but see what you have to go thru to hunt one. That's the kind of model that many desire for us. I suspect we will eventually have it.

I think I have said too much. My apologies to all I have offended. I am passionate about turkey hunting, but I am also passionate about promoting the AL system as the best way to manage turkeys for the good of the flock and hunters alike. Perhaps the world has passed me by.

A good evening to all!


Last edited by poorcountrypreacher; 01/21/16 02:00 PM.

All the labor of man is for his mouth, and yet the appetite is not filled.
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: ] #1620580
01/21/16 01:42 PM
01/21/16 01:42 PM
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South Alabama
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Originally Posted By: jlbuc10

Thanks gobbler your the man! When will hens begin to become receptive to the gobblers?


In warm years, maybe late Feb, early March. Normal probably mid March

Originally Posted By: Matt Brock
Most of the time I have an opportunity to join this debate I choose not to, because it's the same players with the same moves.


Sounds a little derogatory wink Seriously, I respect you participating and, I for one, value your opinion. We need DCNR representation on here and you and nighthunter do a good job of it. While I may not always agree with you, I think the debate is valuable and there are NO ill intentions or traps here! My questions and concerns are serious and I am not trying to be argumentative. I honestly want to know the answer to the title of this thread.

I did my time (10 years) of wildlife research - mostly radio-telemetry - on mostly quail and some turkeys, along with a lot of habitat related research and publication (both scientific and consumer). I should be able to understand this issue but I am having a hard time..... so help me out grin

Originally Posted By: Matt Brock
Incidental kill of non target birds (hens) is greatest in areas with an earlier season due to winter flocking. Don't think you can debate that.


I don't know that illegal hen killing was one of the reasons for the perceived decline in turkey numbers, especially considering that some other declining States have either sex hunting. I would suspect it is WAY behind predators, habitat and weather in population impact in Alabama.

Originally Posted By: Matt Brock
The SETWG was in unanimous agreement that hunter related mortality was the leading cause of adult gobbler mortality, and that shifting seasons to a later date increased production and turkey density.


I am assuming SETWG is Southeast Turkey Working Group - NWTF or symposium group maybe? Can you clarify? I buy hunting as main cause of gobbler mortality - reported over and over. Just want to know HOW "shifting seasons (hence lower gobbler harvest) to a later date increased production and turkey density" works...biologically. I may be dense but I really don't understand.

Originally Posted By: Matt Brock
Several SE states have already tried this and it works. Fewer days to hunt on the latter end of the season ensures hens are bred, receive less disturbance upon nest initiation, and less hunter mortality on the gobbler segment and incidental take of hens.


Which States and any references? Fewer days to hunt on the latter end would assume that some hens are not getting bred - is there ANY evidence of this in south Alabama (the only area I am very familiar with)?

Originally Posted By: Matt Brock
By lowering a limit from 5 birds to 3, approximately 10-12% of birds would be saved each year. That's pretty substantial to me. That comes from our annual hunter survey, and for several consecutive seasons, if we replaced the 5 bird limit with 3, that is the number that was consistent across the board that would have been saved from harvest.


Are you free to share this info? It appears you have a solid handle on how many hunters kill their limit each year based on the hunter survey. If these numbers are solid, that would save approximately 5,000 birds. However, that is still NOT addressing the population decline that I thought we were supposed to be addressing. The decline is in the WHOLE turkey population NOT just "not enough gobblers". If I want a better turkey population then I need to figure out how to increase poult production and recruitment. Lowering the limit on quail, rabbits, squirrels, or any other animal that is harvested at relatively equal male/female ratios, would be somewhat effective if limits were the problem but we are talking about harvest in the MALE segment of the population.

Originally Posted By: Matt Brock
For those of you saying that a limit reduction wouldn't equate to more turkeys, well that makes no sense. Are gobblers not turkeys? Yes they are. More gobblers=more turkeys.


Again, NOT addressing the population decline, just what would appear now as an overharvest of gobblers... which I didn't know was even being talked about. If we are overharvesting gobblers then throw that out and we can discuss it specifically!

Originally Posted By: Matt Brock
Some areas (TN Valley for instance) can not perpetuate turkeys with a long season. The population is impacted in such a negative way it can not rebound, given all other environmental factors equal. Season length can definitely increase or decrease populations. That's fact.


Specific areas like this I totally agree! wink

Originally Posted By: Matt Brock
Ignoring this is foolish. Not making a change is foolish.


I TOTALLY agree with PCP on this one. Alabama should be looked at by the other States and the turkey working group as THE model of how to correctly manage your turkeys. We have the BEST turkey hunting and hunters in the country and should be proud of it, not trying to emulate other States that need a friggin lottery to hunt their turkeys.

Last edited by gobbler; 01/21/16 02:09 PM.

I swear by my life and my love of it that I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: poorcountrypreacher] #1620581
01/21/16 01:43 PM
01/21/16 01:43 PM
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North Alabama
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I can argue where extra gobblers would be significant. I know of several areas that have hens but no gobbler to breed them. All the gobblers were killed out and with only small pockets of birds over an entire county there is no continuous feed of new birds to move on from neighboring property.

The Tennessee valley is made up of patch woods. Take a look at an Ariel photo of the state. Look dead center top of the state. You will see what appears to be a timber less area until you zoom in. Our timber is scarce compared to the rest of the state. That causes a problem with birds naturally moving and relocating.

You shoot all the gobblers in patch woods and you have just screwed the pooch up here. Especially when our birds don't even start breeding good until The first week of April. The gobblers are getting killed before they can breed in many cases and there is not a supply of birds just down the road to take the dead ones place in regards to breeding.

Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: ] #1620594
01/21/16 01:52 PM
01/21/16 01:52 PM
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South Alabama
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Originally Posted By: Matt Brock

There is currently a model we are using that I am not smart enough to understand nor explain. It takes all causes of known mortality, poult production, season length and bag limits, and through some magic and chicken bone voodoo the statistical model will shoot out a projection, over time, of the consequences of certain changes. Example, if poult production and mortality are (x) at the current season length of 45 days, the projected consequence of lowering the season to 30 days under those mortality and production parameters will result in (y). Shifting seasons or shortening/lengthening them has far more consequence than you might think. Enough so, that poult production and recruitment can be impacted positively or negatively depending on the change in season structure. Bag limit changes don't seem to have as large a consequence. Not only is this model scientifically valid, but it can be supported by the changes a few states have taken to reverse the declining trend. Whether you like it or not, there are thousands upon thousands more turkey hunters in AL than there was a decade ago. And even more than two decades ago. Ya'll are basing your opinions on research that was conducted 35-50 years ago, when NOBODY hunted turkeys. Human related mortality is a huge contributing factor to declining turkey populations. Ignoring this is foolish. Not making a change is foolish. You may be fine in your neck of the woods, but in areas with increased urbanization and more turkey hunters status quo is no longer going to cut it.


Models.... This is what got us Global Warming Theory. It isn't that there has been any recorded warming in the last 18 years, there hasn't... it isn't that the seas are rising, they aren't, it isn't that the is caps are melting, they aren't. However, a computer model designed by some University pinheads, through some magic and chicken bone voodoo the statistical model will shoot out a projection, over time, of the consequences of certain changes. So now we are going to use it for turkey numbers. One of my Greatest beefs with the AU project, along with the fact that the research on Wildlife Management areas will generate the data imputed into the model and that will be extrapolated for the State as a whole. Bad idea, IMHO.


I swear by my life and my love of it that I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: QUAKENTIMBER] #1620600
01/21/16 01:56 PM
01/21/16 01:56 PM
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South Alabama
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South Alabama
Originally Posted By: QUAKENTIMBER
If it's 50/50 ratio on gobblers to hens, (which it's not but I've read that it is) ...10000 gobblers would increase the overall gobbler population by 5 percent... I think that's pretty good increase over 5 years... Just would keep getting better....

Yes along with better habitat, predator reduction etc.


Not picking on you or trying to be an azz but that is one of the weakest statements I have seen on here. You cannot stockpile wildlife, especially turkeys. They don't live forever. Your addition to 10,000 more would have the first 2,000 (if they all started out at 2) to be at least 6 years old. Sorry it don't work that way in nature, maybe a University computer model though laugh

Originally Posted By: crenshawco
Originally Posted By: jlbuc10

Originally Posted By: Matt Brock
For those of you saying that a limit reduction wouldn't equate to more turkeys, well that makes no sense. Are gobblers not turkeys? Yes they are. More gobblers=more turkeys.

I already said this and everyone told me I was wrong. Bet they won't say the same to you


I'm afraid y'all can't see the forest for the trees with this argument. Those additional gobblers spared by lowering the limit or shortening the season represent an non-significant increase to the population. Gobblers do nothing to increase populations other than breed hens. I've never hunted anywhere in the state where I felt that there were too few gobblers to successfully breed all the hens.

If you want to increase populations, protect hens, improve nesting habitat, and declare war on predators. Those are the controllable factors. The most significant factor of all is weather though. Weather is the largest determining factor of nesting success from year to year, and that is going to ebb and flow like all things in nature.


thumbup thumbup thumbup

Last edited by gobbler; 01/21/16 01:57 PM.

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Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: N2TRKYS] #1620602
01/21/16 01:58 PM
01/21/16 01:58 PM
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Tuscaloosa Co.
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Originally Posted By: N2TRKYS
Originally Posted By: gobbler
Just a caveat for y'all to think about in this discussion (and relevant to the "lone gobbler on a property". Turkeys have spring ranges in the deep southeast (verified by radio-telemetry data) in the 1,000 - 5,000 acre range. If you have good hearing and can hear a gobbler gobble approximately 1/2 mile away, that is about 500 acres in a circle. Also, as we all know, NEVER do all the turkeys gobble on a given morning and often none. Food for thought.



How long did it take for the gobbler to return, if he did, to his normal area, according to the data?



And do you have a link to this data?


83% of all statistics are made up.

Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: poorcountrypreacher] #1620607
01/21/16 02:01 PM
01/21/16 02:01 PM
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Posts: 14,991
Tuscaloosa Co.
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N2TRKYS  Offline
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Originally Posted By: poorcountrypreacher
Matt, again thanks for posting. One post seemed mainly addressed to me; hope you don't mind me cutting and pasting what you said so I can address your points in a way that all know what I'm referring to.

>>>>PCP, more people kill a 5 bird limit than your estimate. I'll just leave it right there.<<<<

I didn't make up the 2% figure I used. It was given to me by a state employee who had access to the hunter survey. Maybe he didn't have all the info at the time. I know you aren't to blame, but at a time when the state is apparently planning to make drastic changes in our turkey hunting, it is really concerning to me that this info is deliberately being covered up by the state. This one decision made by somebody has caused me to lose a lot of the good will I had built up toward the department in over 50 years of hunting. Tax money financed this research; why on earth is it covered up? I guess that's a rhetorical question; I sure don't expect an answer from anyone.

>>>Turkey24/7 and PCP, since you like to support AU so much, and the words of wisdom that have come from their research for the last several decades.....
There is currently a model we are using that I am not smart enough to understand nor explain.<<<

And then you reference the kind of computer model that is used for the climate change hysteria. I'm not smart enough to understand it either, but I know the outputs of any computer program depend on the inputs, and the inputs are a human decision. And there are plenty of eggheads at Auburn like any university; that's where I first got to know the type. wink

>>>Shifting seasons or shortening/lengthening them has far more consequence than you might think. Enough so, that poult production and recruitment can be impacted positively or negatively depending on the change in season structure.<<<

I'm not going to dispute this, I just wonder how? Is the number of hens killed by hunters the cause? Is it hunters disturbing the nests and causing them to abandon them? If you still have plenty of gobblers in an area all the way thru the end of turkey season, then how can the gobblers have anything to do with poult recruitment? If they somehow do, why isn't there an effort by the state to educate the hunters on it? At least some of us will try to do the right thing if we know what it is. I need something more than just being told that a computer model predicts it if I'm going to change what I'm doing.

>>>Whether you like it or not, there are thousands upon thousands more turkey hunters in AL than there was a decade ago. And even more than two decades ago. <<<

Well, let's look at some facts and see if that really is true whether I like it or not:

2014-60,000 licensed turkey hunters; 42,000 killed.
2004 - 57,000 hunters; 53,000 killed.
1994 - 47,000 hunters; 40,000 killed.
1984 - 38,000 hunters, 37,000 killed.
1975 - 30,000 hunters; 20,000 killed.

I guess it is technically accurate to say there are thousands upon thousands more hunters now than a decade ago, but that's an unusual way to describe 3000. In the past 40 years the number of hunters has doubled, but so has the harvest. Look at the actual results and you will see that we have averaged very close to one bird per hunter for the past 40 years, and that's as far back as the survey goes. And since 1982, it has never been below .6 and never been above 1.1

http://www.outdooralabama.com/sites/default/files/20132014HunterHarvestSurvey.pdf

I just don't see the crisis here. I see a system that has worked extremely well, except in areas that apparently just won't support turkeys.

>>>Ya'll are basing your opinions on research that was conducted 35-50 years ago, when NOBODY hunted turkeys<<<

I think the info I posted refutes the idea that nobody hunted turkeys. Much of north AL didn't even have turkeys in the 70s and 80s. The fact that hunter numbers have increased since then could only be expected. The fact the harvest has risen with the hunter numbers sure looks to me like the system put in place long ago has worked extremely well, and far better than the "enlightened" systems of other states.

>>>Not making a change is foolish.<<<

Well, there we have it. Matt knows what is going on, so it is apparently already decided. I am obviously wasting my time by trying to promote the AL system that has worked so well for so long. I'm near the end of my turkey hunting career, so it won't have much effect on me. When you younger guys are my age and hoping you can draw a tag so you can turkey hunt the next season, I hope you can still remember the good ole days. If you doubt me, just check the regs in Wisconsin. They have nearly as many turkeys as we do, but see what you have to go thru to hunt one. That's the kind of model that many desire for us. I suspect we will eventually have it.

I think I have said too much. My apologies to all I have offended. I am passionate about turkey hunting, but I am also passionate about promoting the AL system as the best way to manage turkeys for the good of the flock and hunters alike. Perhaps the world has passed me by.

A good evening to all!




The hunter survey uses human input, does it not?


83% of all statistics are made up.

Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit? [Re: jlbuc10] #1620611
01/21/16 02:05 PM
01/21/16 02:05 PM
Joined: May 2015
Posts: 3,678
Alabama
Honolua Offline
I'm Honey Lou Lou and I voted for Obama... Twice!!!
Honolua  Offline
I'm Honey Lou Lou and I voted for Obama... Twice!!!
Joined: May 2015
Posts: 3,678
Alabama
Originally Posted By: jlbuc10

Originally Posted By: Matt Brock
For those of you saying that a limit reduction wouldn't equate to more turkeys, well that makes no sense. Are gobblers not turkeys? Yes they are. More gobblers=more turkeys.

I already said this and everyone told me I was wrong. Bet they won't say the same to you


I'll say it. I am grateful for Matt's input. I just don't buy the season limit thing. I conducted 2 informal polls today on two different websites in order to get a feel for what the numbers might be. I am not trying to be disrespectfull at all just disagree.





Does this sway anyone? Probably not, But the numbers are quite a bit higher than I would have guessed.




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