2016 Featured A Surprising Deer Season
Hunters in New York State harvested an estimated 213,061 deer during the 2016-17 hunting seasons, an estimated five percent increase over 2015-16 levels, according to Department of Environmental Conservation Commissioner Basil Seggos this past week.
“Deer hunting in New York is a proud and economically important tradition that is safely enjoyed by hundreds of thousands of residents and visitors each year,” Commissioner Seggos said. “Not only is deer hunting important for providing high quality local protein to families, it is an essential conservation tool that helps reduce negative ecological impacts of deer on forests, farms and communities throughout the state.”
The 2016 deer take included 106,055 antlerless deer and 107,006 antlered bucks. statewide, this represents a 7.5-percent increase in buck harvest from 2015, reflecting modest population growth following the losses experienced during the harsh winter of 2014-15. Antlerless harvest was similar to 2015 (a 2.6-percent increase), as managers sought increased antlerless harvests in certain parts of the state and reduced harvests in others.
Regionally, hunters in the Northern Zone took 24,674 deer, including 16,495 adults.
In the Southern Zone, hunters took 188,387 deer, including 90,511 adult bucks. Last year, DEC kicked off a campaign to encourage hunters to voluntarily pass up shots at young bucks in an effort to grow the population of larger bucks across the state. In areas where hunters had the freedom to choose what type of buck to take, nearly half of the adult bucks taken this past year were 2.5 years or older. Yearling bucks were plentiful, a result of strong survival rates through the 2015-16 winter, yet many hunters voluntarily chose restraint.
“It’s clear that DEC’s public education programs are yielding success, as more hunters are heeding our advice to ‘Let young bucks go to watch them grow,’ providing all hunters the opportunity to see and take larger, more mature bucks,” said Commissioner Seggos.
DEC also confirmed that bucks of all ages across the state were in good condition, with larger antlers, more mass, and fewer spike-antlered buck.
For those of us who live and die by numbers, here are a few that may or may not surprise you all from the 2016 season: 54,099 estimated bucks taken in 2016 that were 2.5 years old or older.
¯ Only 49 percent of bucks taken statewide were yearlings — 54 percent in units without mandatory antler restrictions.
¯ 16.2/0.5 is the number of deer taken per square mile in the unit with the highest (WMU 8N) and lowest (WMUs 5C and 5F) harvest density.
¯ 65 percent, which is proportion of eligible junior hunters who participated in the 2016 Youth Deer Hunt.
¯ 14,085, which is the number of hunter-harvested deer checked by DEC in 2016.
¯ 186,110, number of hunting hours recorded by 3,805 bowhunters who participated in the annual Bowhunter Sighting Log. Participating bowhunters reported 120,067 deer sightings, for an average of 64.5 deer seen per 100 hours hunted. The Bowhunter Sighting Log provides useful data on regional sighting trends for deer, moose, turkey, and a variety of furbearer species.
¯ 2,447, which is the number of deer tested for Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) in 2016-17, and none tested positive. DEC has tested more than 40,000 deer for CWD since 2002.
¯ 56.5 percent, proportion of successful deer hunters who ignored their responsibility to report their harvest as required by law. DEC Environmental Conservation Officers (ECOs) have increased enforcement of non-compliance with the mandatory reporting requirements.
Deer harvest data is gathered from two main sources — harvest reports required of all successful hunters and DEC’s examination of more than 14,000 harvested deer at check stations and meat processors. Statewide harvest estimates are made by cross-referencing these two data sources and calculating the total harvest from the reporting rate for each zone and tag type. Finally, going back to the numbers again, Chautauqua County hunters tagged 7,739 deer of which 3,756 were bucks. Chautauqua County was second in the state to Steuben with 9,729 total harvest.
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