[MAIPC] FW: Deer control in Howard County
Miller, Howard (Eric)
homiller at pa.gov
Mon Nov 2 06:11:11 PST 2015
Early Successional habitat is at an all-time low in PA, Richard and our state bird (plus many, many others) is now a species of conservation concern because of the shortage. White-tailed deer are habitat generalists and utilize any type of habitat available so when critical habitat is created for ruffed grouse and other species, deer just happen to be drawn to it.
Eric Miller | Chief
Public Lands Habitat Section
Bureau of Wildlife Habitat Management
Pennsylvania Game Commission
2001 Elmerton Ave. | Harrisburg, PA 17110
717-787-9613 x 3612 | (m) 717-433-8780
homiller at pa.gov
-----Original Message-----
From: MAIPC [mailto:maipc-bounces at lists.maipc.org] On Behalf Of Richard Gardner
Sent: Monday, November 02, 2015 8:12 AM
To: maipc at lists.maipc.org; MarcImlay <Marc.Imlay at pgparks.com>
Subject: Re: [MAIPC] FW: Deer control in Howard County
Yet in PA the Game Commission in their wisdom is intent on making as much deer habitat as they can. Their official seal contains the words "No tree left standing, No spring left flowing, No animal left unhunted".
--------------------------------------------
On Sun, 11/1/15, Imlay, Marc <Marc.Imlay at pgparks.com> wrote:
Subject: [MAIPC] FW: Deer control in Howard County
To: "maipc at lists.maipc.org" <maipc at lists.maipc.org>
Date: Sunday, November 1, 2015, 7:28 AM
A dramatic reason to control our deer
to a natural density.
At the 200 acre Swann Park in Charles
County, MD I have found vast uncontrollable mono-cultures of Japanese Stilt grass where the deer are out of control but very small amounts
that we remove each year where the deer are much less, as evident by excellent biological diversity of native plants.
No Japanese barberry and about 20 % of the protected area is thick underbrush of greenbrier and blackberry.
Marc Imlay, PhD, Chair, Biological
control working Group
Conservation biologist, Park Ranger
Office, Non-native Invasive Plant Control coordinator.
(301)
442-5657
cell ialm at erols.com
Natural and Historical
Resources Division
The Maryland-National Capital
Park and Planning Commission
www.pgparks.com
From: Ellis, Michael
Sent: Sunday, November 01, 2015 6:25 AM
To: kgmerger <kgmerger at verizon.net>;
Imlay, Marc <Marc.Imlay at pgparks.com>;
'ipetrus1 at verizon.net' <ipetrus1 at verizon.net>
Cc: 'sgagne at erols.com' <sgagne at erols.com>;
bb22 at cornell.edu
Subject: Re: FW: Deer control in Howard
County
From what I've seen
hiking through MPEA, Stiltgrass and Wavyleaf are very well
established in this park but have a harder time forming vast
monocultures because of thick underbrush of greenbrier,
rubus, and unfortunately a very bad Japanese
barberry problem. I was however told that there are
several acres of the park absolutely dominated by Wavyleaf
and Stiltgrass that they are unable to control, it's
possible there are more deer in that section of the
park.
They pull out and spray as
much Wavyleaf as they can in the summer but they stop
working on it by the end of August, afraid they will spread
seeds. When I was there in October the Wavyleaf with seeds
were all over the trails along with
the Stiltgrass.
I was impressed however with
vast thick brier patches which were dense enough to limit
the access of deer to some sections of the park, further
protecting native plant diversity.
Michael Ellis
Non-Native Invasive Plant Specialist
Natural and Historical Resources Division, Park Ranger
Office
The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
www.pgparks.com
240-429-5042
From: Imlay, Marc
Sent: Sunday, November 01, 2015 6:03 AM
To: 'ipetrus1 at verizon.net' <ipetrus1 at verizon.net>;
'kgmerger' <kgmerger at verizon.net>
Cc: Ellis, Michael <Michael.Ellis at pgparks.com>;
'sgagne at erols.com' <sgagne at erols.com>;
'bb22 at cornell.edu' <bb22 at cornell.edu>
Subject: FW: Deer control in Howard County
Hi John Peter and
Aylene,
Studies by Cornell University found
sites where Japanese Stilt grass went away within deer
exclosures. The question is what would happen with a natural
density of deer with managed
hunts. At the 1,000 acre MPEA park with a current natural
density of 20 deer/square mile how is the stilt grass doing?
Cheers
Marc
The
“experimental” managed hunt proposed to the MPEF
differed in many respects from the traditional hunting
regulations followed by MD DNR. Its purpose was not
recreational, designed with hunter satisfaction its
foremost concern, but
management with the frank aim of taking out enough deer
to seriously reduce their number. Moreover, the area to be
hunted was so imbedded in a residential area that
exceptional safety precautions had to be taken and
residents’ safety concerns assuaged.
These two principles guided the hunt protocols.
·
Schedule outside the regular deer season, so as to recruit a
sufficient hunter pool by not restricting their
opportunities elsewhere.
·
Deer taken not to be counted against hunter’s seasonal
limit
·
Two antlerless deer to be taken before every antlered deer
taken, and no restriction on the number of antlerless deer.
(Recall the distinction
between “antlerless” and “does”
above).
·
All shots to be fired from deer stands, minimum height of
10', hunters wearing safety harness, and all shots aimed
downward.
·
Safety zone 150 yards from park perimeter, rather than from
“occupied buildings”.
·
All wounded deer to be tracked to ensure kill.
·
Hunters to be widely spaced at a density of one per 30
acres, at fixed positions.
·
An official Hunt Coordinator present with authority to
oversee the placement of hunters within the site.
·
Rigorous screening of applicants, held to stricter standards
than those sufficient for a hunting license.
As required for all deer
hunting in Maryland, firearms were limited to shotguns
firing slugs, whose range is about 200 yards.
This was not the first
managed hunt to take place in the eastern United States.
Others similar had taken place in Missouri in 19895;
Ohio in 19936;
Gettysburg National Park in 19957;
Groton Long Point CT in 19968,
Bluff Point CT in 1990 and 19969,
each containing most of the elements of the MPEA hunt but
none all of them.
While numbers vary from
day to day, and the FLIR survey no doubt misses some animals
present, it appears safe to say that the deer density at
MPEA has now approached the target level of 20 deer per
square mile. The annual harvest goal to
maintain this density required only 5 hunt days this past
season. This is a remarkable achievement after 9 years of
concerted well-planned management.
Today the MPEA exhibits no
obvious signs of the vegetative depredation so prominent ten
years ago. No browse line is evident anywhere in the
park. A more rigorous comparison with the pre-deer
overabundance conditions awaits a repeat of
quantitative vegetative surveys such as were made in 1971
and 1992. Equally valuable would be a resumption of the
Breeding Bird Censuses on the site that were discontinued in
1993.
From: Frederick Fallon [mailto:fwfallon at ymail.com]
Sent: Monday, October 19, 2015 9:31 PM
To: Sally Gagne <sgagne at erols.com>;
Marc Imlay <ialm at erols.com>
Subject: Deer control in Howard County
Sally,
Marc -
Attached is my history of Howard
County's deer control project. It was written at the
behest of the Middle Patuxent Environmental Area Advisory
Committee,
and - bear in mind- some 10 years ago. A lot of historical
background is included, maybe not
a propos to your focus on the subject,
but I think that that may lend some interest and
color. In any case, here it is attached, in WP. Thanks for
asking!
Fred
Fallon
Huntingtown MD
5.
Hansen, L.P., J. Berringer, “Managed hunts to control
White-tailed deer populations on urban
public areas in Missouri”, in Ref B: 484-487.
6.
Shafer-Nolan, A.L., “The science and politics of deer
overabundance at Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation Area,
Ohio”, in Ref B: 457-461.
7.
Frost, H.C., G.I. Storm, M.J. Bacheller, M.J. Lovallo,
“White-tailed Deer Management at
Gettysburg National Military Park”, in Ref.B:
462-469.
8.
Kilpatrick, H.J., W.D. Walter, “Urban deer management:
A community vote”, in Ref B: 388-391.
9.
Kilpatrick, H.J., S.M. Shelley, G.G. Chasko, “A
controlled Deer Hunt on a state-owned coastal
reserve in CT: controversies, strategies, and
results”, in Ref B: 451-456.
-----Inline Attachment Follows-----
_______________________________________________
MAIPC mailing list
MAIPC at lists.maipc.org
http://lists.maipc.org/listinfo.cgi/maipc-maipc.org
_______________________________________________
MAIPC mailing list
MAIPC at lists.maipc.org
http://lists.maipc.org/listinfo.cgi/maipc-maipc.org
More information about the MAIPC
mailing list