黑料天堂

Skip to main content

Turkey Harvest Up; Debate Continues on Population

turkey

Daniel Sims and son, Fisher, head home after a successful turkey hunt. Photo courtesy of Daniel Sims

By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂

According to Game Check reports, turkey hunters in 黑料天堂 harvested almost 2,500 more birds during the 2023 season than the 2022 season. Whether that鈥檚 an encouraging indication of the turkey population in the state is subject to significant debate.

Hunters reported taking 18,122 birds during the 2023 season, compared to 15,673 during the 2022 season and 14,947 during the 2021 season. Those are Game Check numbers, and Steven Mitchell, the upland game coordinator with the 黑料天堂鈥 (ADCNR) Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries (WFF) Division, said the results of the annual post-season hunter survey are not yet available. Mitchell is concerned that hunters are not reporting their harvests through Game Check as mandated.

鈥淥ur compliance rate on reporting is not where it needs to be,鈥 Mitchell said. 鈥淐omparison of Game Check numbers with post-season harvest surveys gives us an estimated reporting compliance rate. Since implementation of Game Check in 2017-18, harvest reporting compliance has been increasing with each season. However, we are only averaging a 45% compliance rate over the last five years. That rate needs to be much higher. Compliance with harvest reporting is extremely important. We need the most complete and accurate data possible to help inform management of the wild turkey resource.鈥

Chuck Sykes, WFF Director, also said this trend in turkey harvest cannot necessarily be construed as an increase in the turkey population.

鈥淭hat remains to be seen,鈥 Sykes said. 鈥淭hat could be a really good thing, meaning that we鈥檝e got more birds. But we鈥檝e also got more hunters out there. To me, we鈥檝e got more hunters who are taking more birds.鈥

Sykes said he focused on the first 10 days of the past three seasons to illustrate the increase in hunters compared to turkey harvest numbers. During the opening 10 days of the 2021 season 3,808 hunters reported 4,488 birds harvested. The same time period for the 2022 and 2023 seasons showed significant increases in hunters (6,062 hunters in 2022 and 6,325 in 2023) and a corresponding increase in reported harvests (7,391 in 2022 and 7,845 in 2023).

鈥淲e鈥檝e got more hunters each year, killing more turkeys,鈥 Sykes said. 鈥淪o does that mean there are more turkeys out there. I don鈥檛 think so. Only time will tell.鈥

Sykes said what concerns him is the motivation of today鈥檚 turkey hunters compared to previous generations.

鈥淏ack in the day, you hunted turkeys for the challenge,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not saying I didn鈥檛 like killing turkeys, but it was different. I don鈥檛 see that today. I鈥檓 not saying everybody. No matter what rules and regulations we put in place, no matter what science we come up with, we can鈥檛 legislate or regulate morals and ethics. Rules and regs are only as good as people who abide by them.鈥

Sykes said he studied the contacts the WFF Conservation Enforcement Officers had with  turkey hunters during the first 10 days of the 2023 season, and it was disheartening.

鈥淭he number of citations written was embarrassing,鈥 he said. 鈥淢ore than half the counties had citations written in them.鈥

Those game violations included hunting without a license, adults hunting during youth weekend, hunting prior to the opening of the season and using decoys the first 10 days of the season.

鈥淏ut the biggest one was hunting over bait,鈥 Sykes said. 鈥淲e had more than 80 citations written for hunting by the aid of bait in the first 10 days. If we wrote that many, how many were doing it? I think people鈥檚 mindsets have changed to 鈥業 just want to kill turkey under any circumstance so I can post the picture or video on social media.鈥

鈥淚 hope I鈥檓 wrong. It just seems that the lines between right and wrong are very blurred right now.鈥

Jaxson Epperson was able to take a gobbler on his first turkey hunt during youth weekend. Photo courtesy of Jaxson Epperson

Sykes said modern technology has become so sophisticated that the sense of fair chase has been marginalized.

鈥淟ike using a cell phone-activated trail camera, not just to scout, but to see a turkey and go try to kill him,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ack in the day, if a turkey didn鈥檛 gobble but once or twice on the limb, he had a good chance of making it. That was a defense mechanism. You might have hunted him all season. Now, with the cell phone-activated trail camera alerting you every time a turkey walks by, whether he gobbles or not, you can still kill him.

鈥淚鈥檓 not saying all technology is bad. I鈥檓 using a .410 now that shoots better than 12 gauges that I hunted with for 25 years. You鈥檝e got Thermacells and turkey loungers and lightweight guns. We鈥檝e got to take into account that people are much more effective killers. If you throw out the illegal activities, just the legal hunting methods are making people much more effective killers, and I don鈥檛 think people are giving that the attention it needs.鈥

For veteran hunters who remember when the turkey population in 黑料天堂 was not abundant, an outing where a hunter heard a turkey gobble was considered a successful hunt.

鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 seem like that鈥檚 the case anymore,鈥 Sykes said. 鈥淚 think until people respect the bird and love the hunt and love the bird more than they love themselves, the birds are in trouble. People are turkey shooters now, not turkey hunters.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 grow up that way, and a lot of people of our generation can鈥檛 understand that mentality. That鈥檚 what I see. Again, I hope I鈥檓 wrong. I will gladly say that I am.鈥

Meanwhile, Mitchell thinks social media does have one upside for 黑料天堂鈥檚 Eastern wild turkey.

鈥淪ocial media has drawn more people into turkey hunting,鈥 Mitchell said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think that is necessarily a bad thing. I think a lot of it has called attention to the plight of turkeys and the perceived turkey decline. I think or hope people have gained education through social media more than anything.鈥

Mitchell said turkey hunters during the 2023 season enjoyed relatively cool temperatures, which can mean more comfortable hunting conditions later in the season.

鈥淚t may have helped the gobblers as far as gobbling and displaying later into the mornings,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e also had an early spring as far as vegetation. From anecdotal reports I鈥檓 getting from around the state, nests were being observed earlier than previous years. Hopefully that translated into a good hatch. The earlier the nest, the more of a likelihood a brood will successfully hatch young.鈥

WFF personnel will conduct its annual statewide brood survey from July 1 through August 30, when all turkey sightings are noted on field reports that include gobblers, hens without poults, hens with poults, the size of the poults and poults per hen.

鈥淯ltimately, that gives us a poult-per-hen count,鈥 Mitchell said. 鈥淭hat gives an indication of how good our hatch was and juvenile recruitment into the fall population. Last year鈥檚 survey showed we were still below what researchers consider the threshold for sustainable population, which is two poults per hen. Unfortunately, we have been below that threshold for several years now.鈥

Mitchell said many of the hunters he has talked to about the 2023 season considered it a 鈥減retty good鈥 season with a decent amount of gobbling activity.

鈥淢ost of them don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 what it used to be, our numbers are not what they used to be, but they鈥檙e not panicking,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e still hearing gobblers and hunting gobblers, but that was the slight majority. Other have stated their hunting was way down in terms of hearing gobblers and gobbles.鈥

鈥淎necdotal reports from landowners and land managers have been varied. Some have said they have not noticed a drop in turkey numbers while other landowners have noted a decrease in turkey numbers over previous years.鈥

The 2023 season has been over for almost two months, but Mitchell said landowners and leaseholders can use the offseason to be proactive about increasing beneficial habitat for turkeys on their properties.

鈥淚t鈥檚 habitat first and predator control as basically a steroid,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about getting that habitat in a healthier condition to provide benefits for the wild turkey. After that, they can provide more benefit through trapping predators.

鈥淩ight now is a great time to identify habitat needs. A lot of times the limiting factor is brooding habitat or bugging habitat for the poults. People may not like the look of a weedy mess around their property, but that鈥檚 where those young turkeys survive.鈥

Mitchell also said the density of weedy growth can be a detriment to poult survival as well.

鈥淚f a poult cannot easily move through that vegetation to forage for bugs and escape predators, that is not good,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he density of that vegetation is very important. If it鈥檚 choked up with grasses, you might look at prescribed fire or disking. Everything is important at ground level.

鈥淭hinning timber in places where sunlight is not getting to the ground will also help provide brooding and nesting areas. Everybody needs to think 鈥榟abitat鈥 because that鈥檚 the key.鈥

###

 

WFF personnel will begin its annual brood survey across the state on July 1. Photo by David Rainer