Michigan Deer Harvest Estimates 2009
Initial estimates indicate Michigan firearm deer hunters killed 10 to 20 percent fewer deer this year than in 2008, according to the Department of Natural Resources. Decreased harvests were most noticeable in the Upper Peninsula and less apparent in the southern Lower Peninsula.
Weather — both a harsh 2008-2009 winter and unseasonably high temperatures during most of the firearm season — likely contributed to the decreased harvest, wildlife officials said. Although weather across the state was good to ideal for hunters to sit in the woods, it was less than optimal for encouraging deer movement.
DNR biologists estimate the harvest was down by 20 to 30 percent in the Upper Peninsula, 15 to 25 percent in the northern Lower Peninsula, and 5 to 10 percent in the southern Lower Peninsula.
The season has gone pretty much as we expected in the Upper Peninsula, said DNR deer program leader Brent Rudolph. We set antlerless quotas lower in anticipation of a smaller deer herd following last winter. We may have had fewer hunters in the Upper Peninsula. If you have fewer deer, fewer hunters, and deer moving less than usual, those factors are going to have an effect on your deer harvest.
Biologists were a little surprised by the size of the decrease of the harvest in the northern Lower Peninsula, where a more modest decline was anticipated.
Check stations reported a lower than usual percentage of 1-year-old bucks in the Upper and northern Lower Peninsula, an indication of poor survival of last years fawns, Rudolph said. Antler development was below average as well, another indication of the impact of last winters severity.
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