Idaho Mule Deer Management
Robby hosts Toby Boudreau of Idaho Fish and Game. Toby is a wildlife biologist who is a valuable leader in mule deer management in the West.
www.rokslide.com
No talk of that. In fact the conversation goes the other way in preserving the publics wish to hunt yearly,and not just manage for big bucks only.Thanks Great podcast! Only question I would have added was to ask if they are going to limit the deer quotas by zone or units to Residents in the near future?
This is so cool!These podcasts are so interesting and informative. I'm seriously looking at changing career paths. I'm finishing up an Environmental Science degree and had a job lined up with my current employer, but now I'm looking to see if I can use it towards something in wildlife management, habitat management or a similar field. Very interesting guests on the podcast. Love it!
Working on it!Great Rokcast! @robby denning , you should try to get Toby back on to discuss the CWD Symposium that he attended. I agree with your comment on the younger bucks being just as rangy as older bucks. I disagree with the scorched earth direction they took last winter.
Thanks for chiming in I’ll send him your question (good question Btw)Agreed, excellent podcast and information overall.
My follow-up for Toby would be to ask how CWD got to unit 14, before it got to the panhandle or southeastern Idaho. Those locations are closer to known CWD affected areas. I think that CWD is not being transmitted just from deer to deer contact, or by bucks ranging around whether they are young or old. It wasn't a deer or other ungulate that brought CWD to unit 14 of Idaho, unless we are to believe that an infected deer travelled from Montana or Wyoming to the far side of Idaho. So how did it get here? Did a hunter carry prions in the dirt on their boots from an affected area? Or did it come via transportation of agricultural products? How else could CWD just skip over the western side of the state?