I am one of you. I am among the thousands of you who hunt deer and turkey with archery equipment.

Your blogger harvested this white-tailed deer doe and hen wild turkey during a recent fall Nebraska archery deer and turkey hunting session in mid October in rural Sarpy County, NE. Photo by Rich Berggren/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

I want you to join me in voluntarily participating Nebraska’s new Bowhunter Survey. New bowhunter survey? Hmmm … Another survey …

So why should you, an archery deer hunter, consider maintaining a diary and counting free-ranging, wild deer and turkeys for us at Game and Parks?

The answer: Because, like me, I know you care deeply about wildlife.

We spend innumerable hours in the field bowhunting for deer. We see a lot of deer and turkeys. We are selective with what we shoot and thoroughly enjoy what I call “sit or stand sessions,” patiently watching the surrounding landscape, waiting for the right deer to approach, whether from a treestand or in a blind. So why would we not be able to log counts of deer and turkeys?

Here is Tim Heckenlively of Falls City, NE bowhunting from a tree stand in the Missouri River bottoms of Nemaha County, NE. Photo courtesy of NEBRASKAland Magazine/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission

“This survey is very important to us and is entirely dependent on public participation,” said Luke Meduna, Big Game Program Manager for the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission. “We really need our Nebraska bowhunters to be our eyes and ears in the field and document what they see.”

A mature white-tailed deer buck is spotted during a late September archery deer hunt in rural Sarpy County, NE. Photo by Greg Wagner/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

Meduna explained, “The data from the bowhunter survey will help us to better understand doe-to-fawn and buck-to-doe ratios as well as establish a baseline for population trends for both white-tailed and mule deer and wild turkeys.”

An adult white-tailed deer doe is seen during an archery deer hunt in an unharvested soybean field in early October in rural Sarpy County, NE. Photo by Greg Wagner/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

“We would greatly appreciate assistance by any licensed bowhunter with this project, and this survey will give them the opportunity to be part of the process for deer and turkey management,” added Meduna.

A mule deer doe stands on the edge of a corn field in Chase County, NE Photo courtesy of NEBRASKAaland Magazine/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission..

The survey is currently underway and runs to the start of the November firearm deer hunting season.

Why not carry the survey through November and December? “When you get into November, fawns become difficult to separate from the does and yearlings, and hunting tactics of the November firearm season aren’t as standardized as they are during the archery season” Meduna pointed out, “so we will wrap things up at that point.”

Establishing reliable, long-term indices are crucial for making informed decisions on the management of harvested game species like deer and turkey. A hunter observation survey such as this is citizen-science at its best. It provides a wealth of quality information and metrics for wildlife biologists on a broad spatial scale or even on a more localized one at a low-cost option.

A pair of wild turkeys work their way up a grassy hill near a ground blind during a fall bowhunt in rural Douglas County, NE. Photo by Greg Wagner/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

To help keep those costs low, data entry for this survey is available over the Internet at http://outdoornebraska.gov/bowhuntersurvey/. So bowhunters, bookmark that on your phone browser or PC and enter your data after each hunt.

Hunter observation surveys are in use by several natural resource conservation agencies. (E.g. Iowa DNR’s Bowhunter Observation Survey) as a well-grounded means for gathering data to monitor wildlife population trends and dynamics.

The bowhunter survey is yet another tool in the box that will go in concert with other deer and turkey surveys in Nebraska to develop effective management strategies and hunting seasons.

The success of the survey rests with us, the Nebraska bowhunters!

A large hen/poult wild turkey flock is observed in a combined soybean field from a treestand during an archery deer hunt in late October in rural Sarpy County, NE, Nebraska. Photo by Greg Wagner/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

The post Take Part in the New Bowhunter Survey appeared first on Nebraskaland Magazine.

Full Story

print