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Myths And Facts About
Deer Management
http://www.newtownbee.com/Features.asp?s=Features-2006-11-09-13-25-58p1.htm
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Even this Hawleyville
firefighter cannot believe the violent result of this deer vs car
collision on Mt Pleasant Road, where the deer passed through the
windshield and became lodged in the driver's compartment of this
vehicle, seriously injuring the driver. At this time of year, be
aware that shorter days mean high traffic occurs at dawn and dusk
when more deer are moving around. -Bee Photo, Hicks |
Increasing awareness of the
overpopulation of deer in Connecticut has given rise to many
misconceptions and "urban myths" about deer, their role in the spread of
Lyme disease, and in the destruction of native woodlands. As a member
community of the Fairfield County Municipal Deer Management Alliance,
Newtown benefits from the expertise of its members and has hosted talks
on the subject of Lyme disease and deer management through local
organizations including the Rotary and Kevin's Community Center.
QUESTION: Isn't Lyme
disease spread by white footed mice, not deer?
ANSWER: Lyme disease is
caused by a bacterium that is carried by the deer tick. While it is true
that the bacteria is introduced into the tick by the white footed mouse,
it is the white-tailed deer that is responsible for the increasing
number of deer ticks. Without deer the tick cannot reproduce as it
requires a large blood meal from a white tail deer. The deer is the host
of choice for the adult tick. Each deer can carry about 500 ticks. Each
adult female tick can lay 3,000 eggs. Programs carried out in Maine and
Connecticut show conclusively that when deer numbers are reduced
sufficiently, Lyme disease is reduced dramatically. Other animals do not
substitute for the deer. (Kilpatrick and LaBonte 2003)
QUESTION: Why don't we
use contraception to control deer populations?
ANSWER: A $5 million
experimental program funded by the New Jersey League of Municipalities
has recently been dropped due to failure. The contraceptive tested, at a
cost of $1,000 per doe, did not work. There is no contraceptive
available.
For now and for the foreseeable
future there is no tested contraceptive that actually works on wild
deer. If and when it becomes available the drugs will only keep the herd
from growing; they will not reduce the size of an existing herd.
QUESTION: Are there more
deer-car accidents during the hunting season because hunters scare deer
onto the roads?
ANSWER: No. Most
deer-vehicle accidents happen after dark or before daybreak when there
are no hunters out. There are more deer-vehicle accidents on Sundays
(when there is no hunting at all) than Saturdays. Hunting season and the
annual deer rut (mating season) coincide in late fall. During the rut,
deer are energized by the mating instinct and often cross roads while
pursuing does or being pursued by bucks. Also the shorter days during
fall and winter mean that high traffic occurs at dawn and dusk when more
deer are moving around.
No scientific data supports the
claim that hunting activity increases the rate of deer-vehicle
accidents. Instead, a review of data provided by the Department of
Transportation supports the fact that vehicular traffic patterns
influence deer vehicle accidents. Removing deer through hunting or other
deer management techniques is an effective method to reduce deer
populations, which will result in fewer deer-vehicle accidents.
QUESTION: If you start
culling deer, is it true that the remaining deer will just start giving
birth to more fawns than usual?
No, this only occurs if the
deer population is so stressed by starvation that their birth rates are
depressed prior to culling. Following a cull of the population, birth
rates would return to normal causing population recovery. This does not
apply in the case of our deer control programs since the deer
populations are still healthy and increasing. Deer reproduction in our
region remains a constant 1.77 fawns per doe per year according to deer
biologists.
QUESTION: Which is more
dangerous, hunting or Lyme disease?
ANSWER: Hunting is one
of the safest outdoor activities. All hunters must pass many hours of
safety instruction before they can obtain a license. There have been no
nonhunter injuries in the history of controlled deer management hunts in
Connecticut. There were more than 40,000 new cases of physician
confirmed Lyme disease in Connecticut alone in 2002. There are also
untold numbers of undiagnosed cases of Lyme that go on to develop
serious cardiac, neurological, and arthritic complications. The number
increases every year. There are also an average of 100 deer-vehicle
accidents per town in Fairfield County each year adding to the dangers
of excess deer.
QUESTION: Isn't the
understory of the forest being destroyed by the canopy of mature trees
and not by the deer?
ANSWER: No, the natural
cycle of the forest is for mature trees to drop seeds to reseed the
forest. This new growth is protected by the forest canopy from the
drying sun during their early growth period. The deer, however, are
selectively eating these young seedlings and wildflowers. We cannot
blame this lack of understory on the "maturing forest" and "natural
succession" as some would have us believe. According to forestry experts
at Yale, these Fairfield County woods are not mature woodlands; they are
intermediate in their development and would require at least another 50
years of growth to reach the stage of maturity that might cause loss of
diversity due to dense shading of the forest floor. There is also
evidence from forest and wildlife experts at the Connecticut Agriculture
Experiment Station that deer are helping in the spread of invasive
plants such as Japanese Barberry.
QUESTION: Is there any
risk of reducing deer so low that they become endangered?
ANSWER: It is not the
goal of Connecticut deer management programs to reduce the deer to
critically low numbers. Further, it has become so difficult now to
reduce deer numbers in Fairfield County because of lack of access to
land and lack of local hunters that it may be hard to achieve adequate
reduction of deer numbers, let alone go too far. Population reduction
would obviously stop if numbers reached the ideal level of 10 to 12 deer
per square mile. A maintenance plan would then be implemented that might
include contraception if an effective one became available.
QUESTION: Why not just
spray the yard for ticks or kill ticks on deer using the "4-poster
device"?
ANSWER: The tick killing
chemicals used are toxic to children, the environment, and water supply
unless used very carefully. The 4-poster device (used to spread tick
killing chemicals onto the heads of feeding deer) is at risk of
spreading chronic wasting disease (CWD) through the deer herd by
attracting groups of deer to feed at the corn feeder. CWD is a fatal
slow virus disease similar to mad cow disease and has recently been
shown (Science: October 6, 2006) to be spread through deer
saliva, which is an obvious risk at communal feeding stations such as
the 4-poster device. Furthermore, the deer are causing more problems
than Lyme disease alone. Killing ticks will not stop destruction of the
forest nor deer-vehicle accidents.
This information is provided as
a service by the municipally appointed volunteer members of the 16-town
Fairfield County Municipal Deer Management Alliance, which aims to
promote regional approaches to the multiple problems of deer
overpopulation. For more details on these topics, sources and graphs,
and for more FAQs on deer management go to
www.deeralliance.com . |