MADISON – The state Department of Natural Resources is proposing a 2010 deer hunting framework with fewer areas targeted for herd control and a larger portion of the state under traditional “buck plus quota” regulations.
To grow the herd in northeast Wisconsin, the department is proposing issuing no bonus antlerless permits in 18 deer management units where populations are well below goal (compared to 13 last year). This year, for the first time, the department is proposing that archers be restricted from shooting an antlerless deer in these units also, consistent with gun hunters and with the support of bow-hunting groups.
The Natural Resources Board is scheduled to act on the proposal at its April 28 meeting in Green Bay.
The department is recommending a regular nine-day season for 66 deer management units. In four seasons (2007-2010) the number of regular units has grown from 22 to 66. Regular units are those where hunters are able to shoot a buck plus a carefully controlled number of antlerless deer with unit-specific permits. Some units would have no antlerless permits available to facilitate maximum deer population growth.
A total of 46 DMUs are proposed for herd control status, down by 10 units from the 2007 season.
Herd control units are those where the deer population is estimated to be more than 20 percent above the healthy population goal for that unit. In addition to being open to unlimited antlerless deer harvest during all deer hunting seasons herd control units will have an additional antlerless deer gun-hunting opportunity October 14-17. There is no limit to the number of antlerless deer permits hunters may purchase for herd control units. Antlerless permits for herd control units are $2 each. In buck-plus-quota units, bonus antlerless permits cost $12 when they are available.
In the Chronic Wasting Disease Management Zone in south central Wisconsin all 22 units would be earn-a-buck in 2010, a regulation that requires hunters to “earn” a buck permit by shooting an antlerless deer. The number of EAB units in the CWD Management Zone has remained constant at 22 as wildlife officials seek to stop the spread of chronic wasting disease among wild deer.
Final antlerless deer quotas and permit availability for regular units won’t be finalized until late spring. Biologists will continue to track winter and spring weather and fine tune permit levels. So far, winter effects appear to be mostly moderate with a few small areas experiencing severe conditions.
Analysis of the 2009 harvest figures is mostly complete. Deer registrations provided by hunters yield a rich and deep pool of information on hunting success rates, age and sex distribution in the herd and regional population trends. Using these data biologists estimate the 2009 prehunt population was 1.37 million and the post-hunt population, also called the overwinter population, at 990,000.
The estimated statewide post-hunt population of 990,000 is about 25 percent above the new overwinter population goal of 794,000. However, deer populations vary greatly around the state being near or below goal in northern Wisconsin and generally above goal in the farmland regions of the state. Higher overwinter population goals were recently adopted by the Natural Resources Board and approved by the legislature following extensive public involvement, listening and working sessions with hunters, private landowners and stakeholders from agriculture, forestry, university and government.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Keith Warnke (608) 264-6023 or Bob Manwell (608) 264-9248
Source: Wisconsin DNR
http://dnr.wi.gov/news/DNRNews_Lookup.asp?id=219#art2
Wisconsin Whitetail Deer Hunting News, Information, Stories, Tips and more.
Thursday, April 22, 2010
Gun deer season designed to speed herd recovery in north
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Monday, April 12, 2010
Sizing Up: Deer Herd Report
Hunters naturally want predictions of the deer herd population before the hunting season, but we can only estimate what the pre-hunt population was after the season and the estimates hold for an entire Deer Management Unit, not an individual parcel or property.
Even though my hunting partners are long-time deer hunters, more than once they’ve asked how DNR wildlife biologists count deer. If that question keeps coming from my deer camp, I know a lot of others have the same question, especially in years like last hunting season when the number of deer that hunters saw dropped off. My first answer is, “Generally, DNR does not count deer, but we do make a population estimate.”
That estimate of the pre-season deer population is a bit confusing because it can only be accurately calculated in hindsight by collecting information during the hunt and compiling it after the season. It’s a bit like the college basketball season that starts with a lot of unknowns such as how good the recruiting class is (or fawn survival). There are pre-season rankings and predictions. Then the season takes place, the results are tallied and a much clearer picture of the team ranking (or population) emerges.
While the Sex-Age-Kill (SAK) calculation has used the same factors since the 1960s with some modifications, there are misconceptions about how the agency arrives at its annual population estimates. In most areas of the state, “the count” is made by compiling and analyzing the mandatory stubs provided by hunters registering each deer harvested in each Deer Management Unit (DMU). The stub tells the location and sex of each deer harvested and an age is determined for a representative sample of the registered deer. This data is combined with information gathered during field studies to calculate an estimate of what the deer population was like when the hunting season began.
Since the early 1960s, the DNR has used a statistical formula called the SAK model to estimate, not count, Wisconsin’s deer population. Information from hunter harvests is the foundation for making this estimate. There is no way to duplicate the details about the deer herd that more than 600,000 hunters help us capture each year, and the SAK method capitalizes on this power. The specifics that hunters provide when registering their deer are the most important parts of the deer population estimate.
SAK incorporates the registered buck harvest and other data collected by hunters and field biologists using a series of equations developed with decades of sound population data to estimate the size and makeup of the buck, doe and fawn populations as they were prior to the hunting season.
SAK in detail
Let’s look at the SAK method in more detail. There are several parts to the SAK model: the buck harvest, the buck harvest rate, the age structure of bucks and does harvested (the adult sex ratio), and the fall fawn-to-doe ratio.
The buck harvest is the combined registered buck kill from all seasons and includes bucks taken using damage permits. In Wisconsin, this harvest data comes from the registration stubs hunters have provided since 1953. At registration stations, DNR staff and volunteers age a representative sample of deer brought in by hunters — more than 20,000 animals are aged each year. These data are critical for accurately estimating the buck harvest rate and the adult buck-to-doe ratio.
The buck harvest rate relies heavily on the data collected by aging bucks harvested statewide and on past research gauging the proportion of all bucks taken during legal hunting seasons. In heavily hunted populations, about 90 percent of buck mortality is due to legal harvest. In more lightly hunted populations, the legal harvest may account for only 60 percent of buck mortality. The buck harvest rate is generally higher in the southern farmland areas of Wisconsin where the deer range is more fragmented and hunter densities are higher than in the extensive northern forests, although this has been changing recently.
The adult sex ratio of adult does to bucks in the fall population is estimated by measuring the proportion of yearling does to yearling bucks from the harvest data. This is another factor that relies on the information we gather when aging deer at the registration stations. The comparisons year to year show that does live much longer than bucks.
Let me show how this factor is used. Hypothetically, if buck and doe fawns were born in approximately equal numbers and if bucks were to die about twice as fast as does do, then the proportion of yearling does in the harvest would be about twice that of yearling bucks. In this example, the adult sex ratio would be about 2:1 — two does per buck. In reality, there are between 1.2 and 2.3 adult does for every adult buck (at the start of the hunting season). Generally, there are more does per buck in southern Wisconsin where hunting pressure on bucks is higher.
The fall fawn-to-doe ratio is created by data collected by department staff and volunteers who keep records of deer observations from July through September. Biologists, foresters and many other volunteers record the number and type of deer they see and the DMU (management unit) in which the observation was made. The compiled data are used to estimate the yearly fawn production per doe around the state. That number is multiplied by the number of adult does to estimate the fawn population.
Essentially the number of bucks in the herd is estimated by dividing the number killed during the hunting season by the harvest rate. The doe estimate is made by multiplying the number of bucks harvested during the deer season by the ratio of adult does to adult bucks. The number of fawns is judged by multiplying this doe estimate by the fawn-to-doe ratio. Adding these three totals together provides an estimate of the deer population on the landscape before the hunting season opened.
To estimate the number of deer remaining after the hunting season, the total harvest is multiplied by 1.15 (to account for 15% of the population that we estimate may die from wounds or poaching mortality). That total is subtracted from the pre-hunt population to form a post-hunt population estimate. Those post-hunt estimates are built into the overwinter goals for the herd.
What SAK can and cannot do
SAK is a time-tested model that had been independently reviewed for reliability and precision several times. According to outside experts, the amount of data collected and the way SAK is used make Wisconsin’s deer population estimate one of the best in the nation. The SAK uses harvest information from hunters to estimate the deer population at two points: 1) pre-hunt (September 15) and post-hunt (February 1). The information used to form the SAK is robust because it is re-calculated every year from data collected when deer are harvested by more than 600,000 hunters. However, this model does have limits. SAK is not designed to predict how many deer will be in Wisconsin woods and fields before the fall hunting season begins. The harvest data can only be used to estimate the pre-hunt deer population in hindsight.
Long-term averages of historical data are used to estimate how deer herds change between February and September. Indices like the Winter Severity Index estimate how well the herd survives under various winter conditions. These averages are applied to project what may be expected to happen in any given year. Predicting the fall status of the herd is less accurate since these predictions are based on historic data on herd growth and are influenced by many factors, including winter weather and spring weather conditions that affect fawn survival.
For those of you who are a bit more interested in mathematics and statistics, we’ll delve into the SAK a bit deeper. The precision of SAK decreases as the sample size decreases. So the population estimates are much more precise and accurate for larger Deer Management Units covering a larger area. The SAK cannot estimate the deer population on a single parcel of property. This can be frustrating to hunters as the average deer density calculated by SAK for a whole management unit is not likely to be reflected in what they see right under their treestands. Deer are not distributed evenly across the landscape and their travel patterns change with time.
SAK also does not directly estimate the impact of predators on deer populations. However, since the estimate is valid immediately prior to the hunting season, the impact of predation is accounted for in the population estimates.
Hunt by observing deer habits and patterns.
Deer will largely stay put and stick to a small area of land following a daily pattern in moving from bedding areas to feeding areas to resting areas. To see the highest number of deer, hunters are best served to either set up along established deer trails or take actions to make the deer move. Changes in land ownership, access to hunting lands and hunting methods have definitely changed deer habits. Large family farms are being divided into smaller parcels. Smaller parcels make deer drives more difficult as hunters need to establish relationships with more landowners to get permission to hunt. Smaller parcels of land also usually mean more fences and more scattered development that can change deer movements.
Changing hunting methods also change the patterns and habits of the deer herd. Hunting from a treestand was legalized in the early 1970s and quickly became a favored method. Both hunters and deer are staying put. Deer are less likely to move and be seen as fewer drives are occurring. In addition, baiting and feeding for deer reduces deer movement and increases night feeding after hunting hours close for the day. If you are not seeing deer, here are some tips you can try that might increase your chances:
• still hunt for a while.
• organize deer drives — make sure you take extra safety precautions and know where all the hunters in your party are located.
• encourage other hunters to stop baiting in the area you are hunting.
• scout hunting areas before the season to find locations deer are frequenting. Just like fishing, if the fish aren’t biting in one spot, it’s often best to move to another spot.
Hunting restrictions that strongly influence the buck harvest rate can also cause biases in SAK estimates. For this reason, SAK is not used in management units with Earn-A-Buck seasons where hunters must first harvest a doe before shooting at bucks.
SAK scrutiny
SAK estimates of Wisconsin’s deer population hold up well when compared to the results from other methods such as helicopter counts, pellet surveys, road-kill trends, deer trail surveys, and buck harvest trends. Several independent groups have reviewed and audited the SAK model. As recently as 2006, an independent panel of nationally recognized experts in deer population monitoring and biometrics audited Wisconsin’s SAK method. The audit panel used a combination of computer simulations, literature review, and surveys by other states to better understand both the utility and credibility of the SAK model. The audit panel determined “Wisconsin has the most comprehensive and transparent deer management program for comparable states that harvest white-tailed deer.” The audit panel concluded the model does reasonably well at retroactively estimating deer abundance immediately before the hunting season at the statewide level. The panel also concluded SAK allows for an extensive population assessment in contrast to more expensive and intensive procedures. The audit panel also recommended potential improvements that DNR wildlife managers are working to implement where feasible.
The panel recommended continuing to use five-year averages for yearling buck and doe percentages. The panel also recommended reporting deer population estimates as both the number of deer in a DMU and the deer density per square mile of deer range in each DMU. Both recommendations were implemented.
Strengthening deer population estimates
Improving the quality and quantity of data used to make deer population estimates is always a work in progress. Our deer management program is also exploring opportunities to take full advantage of field observations by hunters, landowners and other citizens to better monitor the herd. One option is expanding the circle of partners and volunteers who provide summer fawn/doe observations.
Increasing the number of deer we can age at harvest time would also improve the estimate’s precision as would combining DMUs to form fewer but larger Deer Management Units, as recommended by the 2006 SAK audit panel.
Starting this year, the DNR wildlife team will collect more information from successful hunters on deer registration stubs to strengthen our information about the herd. Hunters will be asked how many deer they observed on the day their deer was harvested, the number of hours they hunted on the day of harvest, hunting weather conditions and buck/doe/fawn identification. In addition to the deer stub, we’re starting an online survey where hunters can record their daily sightings each time they hunt (dnr.wi.gov/org/ land/wildlife/harvest/survey.htm).
How can you help? If you hunt and harvest a deer, please fill out the registration stub carefully and completely. As you can appreciate, accurate information is key to improving our understanding and management of the deer herd. We also believe new information collected this year will help provide an index of deer sightings per hour of hunting. After collecting this information for a period of years, we hope to develop an index that tracks deer population estimates and harvest. On those days when you hunt but don’t harvest a deer, please take the time to log onto our website and complete the survey. The more you tell us about your hunting experiences, the more we will be able to build an index from hunter-collected data.
Sustaining Wisconsin’s deer population is very important to our hunting tradition and our state’s economy. Even if you don’t hunt, deer influence your home, your business, your recreation and your travel. Dependable deer population estimates are important for proper deer herd management.
For more details about managing Wisconsin’s deer herd:
• SAK Model Review Panel Audit Report: dnr.wi.gov/org/land/wildlife/hunt/deer/SAKreport.pdf
• “Wisconsin’s Deer Management Program, The issues involved in decision making:” dnr.wi.gov/org/land/wildlife/hunt/deer/Deerbook.pdf
• The Wisconsin DNR website, Deer Hunting in Wisconsin, includes 2009 deer season structure harvest information, deer hunting regulations and more: dnr.wi.gov/org/land/wildlife/hunt/deer/
• To receive DNR Deer Program updates automatically via e-mail or RSS: service.govdelivery.com/service/multi_subscribe.html?code=WIDNR
Source: Wisconsin DNR
http://dnr.wi.gov/org/land/wildlife/hunt/deer/herdstory.pdf
Even though my hunting partners are long-time deer hunters, more than once they’ve asked how DNR wildlife biologists count deer. If that question keeps coming from my deer camp, I know a lot of others have the same question, especially in years like last hunting season when the number of deer that hunters saw dropped off. My first answer is, “Generally, DNR does not count deer, but we do make a population estimate.”
That estimate of the pre-season deer population is a bit confusing because it can only be accurately calculated in hindsight by collecting information during the hunt and compiling it after the season. It’s a bit like the college basketball season that starts with a lot of unknowns such as how good the recruiting class is (or fawn survival). There are pre-season rankings and predictions. Then the season takes place, the results are tallied and a much clearer picture of the team ranking (or population) emerges.
While the Sex-Age-Kill (SAK) calculation has used the same factors since the 1960s with some modifications, there are misconceptions about how the agency arrives at its annual population estimates. In most areas of the state, “the count” is made by compiling and analyzing the mandatory stubs provided by hunters registering each deer harvested in each Deer Management Unit (DMU). The stub tells the location and sex of each deer harvested and an age is determined for a representative sample of the registered deer. This data is combined with information gathered during field studies to calculate an estimate of what the deer population was like when the hunting season began.
Since the early 1960s, the DNR has used a statistical formula called the SAK model to estimate, not count, Wisconsin’s deer population. Information from hunter harvests is the foundation for making this estimate. There is no way to duplicate the details about the deer herd that more than 600,000 hunters help us capture each year, and the SAK method capitalizes on this power. The specifics that hunters provide when registering their deer are the most important parts of the deer population estimate.
SAK incorporates the registered buck harvest and other data collected by hunters and field biologists using a series of equations developed with decades of sound population data to estimate the size and makeup of the buck, doe and fawn populations as they were prior to the hunting season.
SAK in detail
Let’s look at the SAK method in more detail. There are several parts to the SAK model: the buck harvest, the buck harvest rate, the age structure of bucks and does harvested (the adult sex ratio), and the fall fawn-to-doe ratio.
The buck harvest is the combined registered buck kill from all seasons and includes bucks taken using damage permits. In Wisconsin, this harvest data comes from the registration stubs hunters have provided since 1953. At registration stations, DNR staff and volunteers age a representative sample of deer brought in by hunters — more than 20,000 animals are aged each year. These data are critical for accurately estimating the buck harvest rate and the adult buck-to-doe ratio.
The buck harvest rate relies heavily on the data collected by aging bucks harvested statewide and on past research gauging the proportion of all bucks taken during legal hunting seasons. In heavily hunted populations, about 90 percent of buck mortality is due to legal harvest. In more lightly hunted populations, the legal harvest may account for only 60 percent of buck mortality. The buck harvest rate is generally higher in the southern farmland areas of Wisconsin where the deer range is more fragmented and hunter densities are higher than in the extensive northern forests, although this has been changing recently.
The adult sex ratio of adult does to bucks in the fall population is estimated by measuring the proportion of yearling does to yearling bucks from the harvest data. This is another factor that relies on the information we gather when aging deer at the registration stations. The comparisons year to year show that does live much longer than bucks.
Let me show how this factor is used. Hypothetically, if buck and doe fawns were born in approximately equal numbers and if bucks were to die about twice as fast as does do, then the proportion of yearling does in the harvest would be about twice that of yearling bucks. In this example, the adult sex ratio would be about 2:1 — two does per buck. In reality, there are between 1.2 and 2.3 adult does for every adult buck (at the start of the hunting season). Generally, there are more does per buck in southern Wisconsin where hunting pressure on bucks is higher.
The fall fawn-to-doe ratio is created by data collected by department staff and volunteers who keep records of deer observations from July through September. Biologists, foresters and many other volunteers record the number and type of deer they see and the DMU (management unit) in which the observation was made. The compiled data are used to estimate the yearly fawn production per doe around the state. That number is multiplied by the number of adult does to estimate the fawn population.
Essentially the number of bucks in the herd is estimated by dividing the number killed during the hunting season by the harvest rate. The doe estimate is made by multiplying the number of bucks harvested during the deer season by the ratio of adult does to adult bucks. The number of fawns is judged by multiplying this doe estimate by the fawn-to-doe ratio. Adding these three totals together provides an estimate of the deer population on the landscape before the hunting season opened.
To estimate the number of deer remaining after the hunting season, the total harvest is multiplied by 1.15 (to account for 15% of the population that we estimate may die from wounds or poaching mortality). That total is subtracted from the pre-hunt population to form a post-hunt population estimate. Those post-hunt estimates are built into the overwinter goals for the herd.
What SAK can and cannot do
SAK is a time-tested model that had been independently reviewed for reliability and precision several times. According to outside experts, the amount of data collected and the way SAK is used make Wisconsin’s deer population estimate one of the best in the nation. The SAK uses harvest information from hunters to estimate the deer population at two points: 1) pre-hunt (September 15) and post-hunt (February 1). The information used to form the SAK is robust because it is re-calculated every year from data collected when deer are harvested by more than 600,000 hunters. However, this model does have limits. SAK is not designed to predict how many deer will be in Wisconsin woods and fields before the fall hunting season begins. The harvest data can only be used to estimate the pre-hunt deer population in hindsight.
Long-term averages of historical data are used to estimate how deer herds change between February and September. Indices like the Winter Severity Index estimate how well the herd survives under various winter conditions. These averages are applied to project what may be expected to happen in any given year. Predicting the fall status of the herd is less accurate since these predictions are based on historic data on herd growth and are influenced by many factors, including winter weather and spring weather conditions that affect fawn survival.
For those of you who are a bit more interested in mathematics and statistics, we’ll delve into the SAK a bit deeper. The precision of SAK decreases as the sample size decreases. So the population estimates are much more precise and accurate for larger Deer Management Units covering a larger area. The SAK cannot estimate the deer population on a single parcel of property. This can be frustrating to hunters as the average deer density calculated by SAK for a whole management unit is not likely to be reflected in what they see right under their treestands. Deer are not distributed evenly across the landscape and their travel patterns change with time.
SAK also does not directly estimate the impact of predators on deer populations. However, since the estimate is valid immediately prior to the hunting season, the impact of predation is accounted for in the population estimates.
Hunt by observing deer habits and patterns.
Deer will largely stay put and stick to a small area of land following a daily pattern in moving from bedding areas to feeding areas to resting areas. To see the highest number of deer, hunters are best served to either set up along established deer trails or take actions to make the deer move. Changes in land ownership, access to hunting lands and hunting methods have definitely changed deer habits. Large family farms are being divided into smaller parcels. Smaller parcels make deer drives more difficult as hunters need to establish relationships with more landowners to get permission to hunt. Smaller parcels of land also usually mean more fences and more scattered development that can change deer movements.
Changing hunting methods also change the patterns and habits of the deer herd. Hunting from a treestand was legalized in the early 1970s and quickly became a favored method. Both hunters and deer are staying put. Deer are less likely to move and be seen as fewer drives are occurring. In addition, baiting and feeding for deer reduces deer movement and increases night feeding after hunting hours close for the day. If you are not seeing deer, here are some tips you can try that might increase your chances:
• still hunt for a while.
• organize deer drives — make sure you take extra safety precautions and know where all the hunters in your party are located.
• encourage other hunters to stop baiting in the area you are hunting.
• scout hunting areas before the season to find locations deer are frequenting. Just like fishing, if the fish aren’t biting in one spot, it’s often best to move to another spot.
Hunting restrictions that strongly influence the buck harvest rate can also cause biases in SAK estimates. For this reason, SAK is not used in management units with Earn-A-Buck seasons where hunters must first harvest a doe before shooting at bucks.
SAK scrutiny
SAK estimates of Wisconsin’s deer population hold up well when compared to the results from other methods such as helicopter counts, pellet surveys, road-kill trends, deer trail surveys, and buck harvest trends. Several independent groups have reviewed and audited the SAK model. As recently as 2006, an independent panel of nationally recognized experts in deer population monitoring and biometrics audited Wisconsin’s SAK method. The audit panel used a combination of computer simulations, literature review, and surveys by other states to better understand both the utility and credibility of the SAK model. The audit panel determined “Wisconsin has the most comprehensive and transparent deer management program for comparable states that harvest white-tailed deer.” The audit panel concluded the model does reasonably well at retroactively estimating deer abundance immediately before the hunting season at the statewide level. The panel also concluded SAK allows for an extensive population assessment in contrast to more expensive and intensive procedures. The audit panel also recommended potential improvements that DNR wildlife managers are working to implement where feasible.
The panel recommended continuing to use five-year averages for yearling buck and doe percentages. The panel also recommended reporting deer population estimates as both the number of deer in a DMU and the deer density per square mile of deer range in each DMU. Both recommendations were implemented.
Strengthening deer population estimates
Improving the quality and quantity of data used to make deer population estimates is always a work in progress. Our deer management program is also exploring opportunities to take full advantage of field observations by hunters, landowners and other citizens to better monitor the herd. One option is expanding the circle of partners and volunteers who provide summer fawn/doe observations.
Increasing the number of deer we can age at harvest time would also improve the estimate’s precision as would combining DMUs to form fewer but larger Deer Management Units, as recommended by the 2006 SAK audit panel.
Starting this year, the DNR wildlife team will collect more information from successful hunters on deer registration stubs to strengthen our information about the herd. Hunters will be asked how many deer they observed on the day their deer was harvested, the number of hours they hunted on the day of harvest, hunting weather conditions and buck/doe/fawn identification. In addition to the deer stub, we’re starting an online survey where hunters can record their daily sightings each time they hunt (dnr.wi.gov/org/ land/wildlife/harvest/survey.htm).
How can you help? If you hunt and harvest a deer, please fill out the registration stub carefully and completely. As you can appreciate, accurate information is key to improving our understanding and management of the deer herd. We also believe new information collected this year will help provide an index of deer sightings per hour of hunting. After collecting this information for a period of years, we hope to develop an index that tracks deer population estimates and harvest. On those days when you hunt but don’t harvest a deer, please take the time to log onto our website and complete the survey. The more you tell us about your hunting experiences, the more we will be able to build an index from hunter-collected data.
Sustaining Wisconsin’s deer population is very important to our hunting tradition and our state’s economy. Even if you don’t hunt, deer influence your home, your business, your recreation and your travel. Dependable deer population estimates are important for proper deer herd management.
For more details about managing Wisconsin’s deer herd:
• SAK Model Review Panel Audit Report: dnr.wi.gov/org/land/wildlife/hunt/deer/SAKreport.pdf
• “Wisconsin’s Deer Management Program, The issues involved in decision making:” dnr.wi.gov/org/land/wildlife/hunt/deer/Deerbook.pdf
• The Wisconsin DNR website, Deer Hunting in Wisconsin, includes 2009 deer season structure harvest information, deer hunting regulations and more: dnr.wi.gov/org/land/wildlife/hunt/deer/
• To receive DNR Deer Program updates automatically via e-mail or RSS: service.govdelivery.com/service/multi_subscribe.html?code=WIDNR
Source: Wisconsin DNR
http://dnr.wi.gov/org/land/wildlife/hunt/deer/herdstory.pdf
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2010 Wisconsin Whitetail Deer Season Proposal,
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