Hunter efficacy is proven and has been for a very long time--longer than most of us have been alive. That hunter efficacy is reduced by using a weapon with a limited range (bow vs rifle) is a no-brainer that I dont think should be in question. If a harvest goal is 3000 animals, and a bow season has a 10% success rate, while a rifle season has a 30% success rate, that is the difference between 30,000 tags and 10,000 tags. It's that simple if only looking at that. the difference may or may not be that stark, but you can bet it is estimated and used as part of calculating how many tags to issue. Season dates (length as well as time within the season) also play into it though. And "hunter experience" as well, ie ability to hunt at all, crowding, the type of experience people want, bucks versus BIG bucks, what other seasons are concurrent, fundraising (how much can we gouge from NR's to pay for it all), etc. It's all estimated, but it literally comes down to a simple math equation of hunter efficacy and the harvest goal=the number of tags available.
@littlebigtine I agree with that 100%. To be clear I am not ADVOCATING for anything here other than taking responsibility for whatever part in the solution we can be truly accountable for. There are both scientific and social elements to the topic, so to the degree that "the sustainable well-being of mule deer" or any other similar topic we could cook up, is related to hunter efficacy and the tradeoff between sustainable harvest vs tag allocation, touches on this. I simply am following the conversation and I see the argument going around in circles largely based on emotion and fear. I am certainly not advocating for making a change that isnt going to affect the issue. I am advocating for being clear about what is trying to be solved and what all of the levers are that can be pulled to address that, and that hunters --as wildlife advocates as well as users--take the lead on those elements that we have control over, while simultaneously advocating for change in the areas where we dont have direct control. Inherent in this approach is that if a lever doesnt actually accomplish something that is needed, then it's not providing anything--data can show that, and that's precisely why some states are experimenting with equipment restrictions as a tool to gauge its actual effect on hunter efficacy.
@Q, there is a fundamental difference between "ineffective solutions" versus "solutions that are effective but are only responsible for a small part of the necesssary change". No one is advocating for making ineffective solutions, only for effective solutions even if they can't be the
only solutions. If hunter efficacy only plays a role in 1% of the solution, but it can make a meaningful impact on that 1%, then that is one effective solution. If we who directly benefit from wildlife arent willing to take that step
where it contributes to the needed solution, then why would anyone else contribute to the solution either? It takes data and a clear view of what the effect of any proposed solution will do, but that's the distinction.