Packer9037
Lil-Rokslider
Pretty sure these animals have survived hard winters for longer than any of us have been alive...maybe a few less animals here or there, but if you put in the work you can find them. I'm going hunting.
Pretty sure these animals have survived hard winters for longer than any of us have been alive...maybe a few less animals here or there, but if you put in the work you can find them. I'm going hunting.
Apologies for not clarifying....I meant the species overall. I understand that a fawn or calf born this spring will probably die before me unless I'm the one hunting them. Then they'll be safe for much longer.You do know the average lifespan of elk/deer isnt very long right?
It's pretty bad, I'm getting lots of pictures of dead elk from all over the west.Elk adult winterkill is fractional compared to deer/antelope.
So how exactly do you quantify those?It's pretty bad, I'm getting lots of pictures of dead elk from all over the west.
Some of the places I am looking there are more Elk tags than last year...Got make up for rev loss from deer/antelope tag reductions some how....More Elk tags anyone? Folks gonna be disappointed when they finally cash in all their PP for that LE unit they been wanting to hunt and there are more tags issued in that unit this year....After a quick review of the proposed changes in Wy, my impression is that the pronghorn and deer quotas/seasons may be restricted significantly in some areas, but elk quotas/seasons may actually be relaxed in general. If I had elk plans for the fall of 2023, I would not be changing them.
That’s because those units are still over objective. Some herds literally have 4X the target population.Some of the places I am looking there are more Elk tags than last year...Got make up for rev loss from deer/antelope tag reductions some how....More Elk tags anyone? Folks gonna be disappointed when they finally cash in all their PP for that LE unit they been wanting to hunt and there are more tags issued in that unit this year....
So let's issue more tags and push them to private even faster this year. That should get the population under objective. The reason they over objective is access, issuing more tags won't solve that problem. It's only going to add more pressure on the public land in that unit.That’s because those units are still over objective. Some herds literally have 4X the target population.
So how exactly do you quantify those?
I saw a couple dozen cows and calves hit on the interstate north of Idaho falls last July in one weekend, does that mean that semis are killing all the elk?
Radio collar data is about the best method of estimating true winter mortality. I'm not aware of any elk radio collar data showing significant mortality in elk, unlike deer and antelope. There is likely higher than normal winter mortality, but when "normal" is low single digits, you could increase that significantly without seeing obvious changes on the landscape.
Biology by anecdote, sounds great.Colorado and Wyoming are both reporting significant elk die off.
Idaho doesn't give 2 flying F's.
If you live in a place for 30 years and don't ever remember seeing dead elk in any numbers, then the guy who lives there finds twenty dead in the last month, or in the case of a rancher I know in SE Idaho, he's hauled out over 100 dead this year, its a reasonable assumption that significant amounts of elk are dieing.
You keep looking for studies though.
Biology by anecdote, sounds great.
Guessing*, Guessed*....I’m guess you listened to fauci too..
Biology by anecdote, sounds great.
Well, it recovered game animal populations from extinction track to the populations we have today. It's shown us the importance of habitat fragmentation and migration routes for elk, mule deer, antelope etc.How far has biology from college trained biologist got us?
I’ll wait..