This made my dayIn this state they can identify as which ever species they want too
This made my dayIn this state they can identify as which ever species they want too
That map might be for B and C ,or P And Y, but it doesn't reflect the true genetics of our deer herds. The deer In the x zones don't look like the deer in the foothills of the D zones.Found it! (MDF map)
View attachment 541210
I was raised in the mountains of c zone and still hunt there. We only hunt Mule deer.On no, not this topic again.
Fish and wildlife call deer in D and C blacktail
If a deer genetically tests 90/10 blacktail to mule deer what is it?
So which of the deer I posted pictures of are mule deer?I was raised in the mountains of c zone and still hunt there. We only hunt Mule deer.
I’ll let the biologists at DFW make my argumentI was raised in the mountains of c zone and still hunt there. We only hunt Mule deer.
This is basically my thoughts.My thoughts, a pure blacktail throws a smaller rack, so in areas where the 2 species overlap(which they seem to do a lot in California) and when the “species” comes into question for trophy purposes, you would have to call those hybrids mule deer rather than blacktail. Believe me I saw a lot of “mule deer” east of the cascade crest in Washington that clearly had a lot of blacktail characteristics to them. If I had shot one I certainly wouldn’t have been able to call it a blacktail. I’ve also seen people shoot “blacktails” with long white rope tails and black tips west of the cascades who get upset when you tell them their blacktail is really a mule deer. The reality of it all is that there is so much hybridization, which is why I-5 has been identified as a border for “pure” blacktails in Washington and Oregon
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
This is basically my thoughts.
Mule deer guys don't really care.
Its the guys that want to pass a cross as a BT for trophy reasons that get all frothed up.
Not really true any more. They can now use DNA testing. Kill a buck outside the boundary that you think is BT. Get it tested. If deemed BT, you can enter it.That map might be for B and C ,or P And Y, but it doesn't reflect the true genetics of our deer herds. The deer In the x zones don't look like the deer in the foothills of the D zones.
Yep, and I know of a couple not high profile C zone bucks that qualified pope and young if they were deemed black tails. I can’t say with certainty but they were rumored to have been tested and successfully submitted as blacktail. I personally trust the source.Not really true any more. They can now use DNA testing. Kill a buck outside the boundary that you think is BT. Get it tested. If deemed BT, you can enter it.
The one with velvet is definitely a blacktailFor those who voted coast only. One of these is off 20 below clear lake the other two are Sierra foothills. Tell me which one is a blacktail
That is really cool@MotoHunter39 @Lou (Louis) It's a trick question, those three pictures were taken within 1/4 of one another. The first and third buck are resident deer and the middle one migrated in after the Bear fire. -- These are all D zone bucks in what most here are claiming is mule deer-only territory.