Abstract

After decades of high deer populations, North American forests have lost much of their previous biodiversity. Any landscape‐level recovery requires substantial reductions in deer herds, but modern societies and wildlife management agencies appear unable to devise appropriate solutions to this chronic ecological and human health crisis. We evaluated the effectiveness of fertility control and hunting in reducing deer impacts at Cornell University. We estimated spring deer populations and planted Quercus rubra seedlings to assess deer browse pressure, rodent attack, and other factors compromising seedling performance. Oak seedlings protected in cages grew well, but deer annually browsed ≥60% of unprotected seedlings. Despite female sterilization rates of >90%, the deer population remained stable. Neither sterilization nor recreational hunting reduced deer browse rates and neither appears able to achieve reductions in deer populations or their impacts. We eliminated deer sterilization and recreational hunting in a core management area in favor of allowing volunteer archers to shoot deer over bait, including at night. This resulted in a substantial reduction in the deer population and a linear decline in browse rates as a function of spring deer abundance. Public trust stewardship of North American landscapes will require a fundamental overhaul in deer management to provide for a brighter future, and oak seedlings may be a promising metric to assess success. These changes will require intense public debate and may require new approaches such as regulated commercial hunting, natural dispersal, or intentional release of important deer predators (e.g., wolves and mountain lions). Such drastic changes in deer management will be highly controversial, and at present, likely difficult to implement in North America. However, the future of our forest ecosystems and their associated biodiversity will depend on evidence to guide change in landscape management and stewardship.

Highlights

  • Temperate forests in eastern North America face a crisis due to ac‐ celerated development, climate change, and introduced pests and diseases (Aukema et al, 2010; Liebhold et al, 2013)

  • The assessments of the 2010 and 2011 cohorts allowed us to evaluate the impacts of no management, sterilization, and recreational hunting (Figure 1) on oak browse rates, rodent attack, and growth for oaks protected in individual cages or exposed to deer

  • We evaluated deer browse rate as a function of management regime and fencing with Cox proportional hazard mod‐ els implemented in the R statistical (R Core Team, 2016) package “coxme” (Therneau, 2015)

Read more

Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Temperate forests in eastern North America face a crisis due to ac‐ celerated development, climate change, and introduced pests and diseases (Aukema et al, 2010; Liebhold et al, 2013). High populations of white‐tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus, Figure 1) cause dramatic and wholesale changes in habitats across much of North America, that threaten the continent's biodiversity, econo‐ mies, and human health (Côté, Rooney, Tremblay, Dussault, & Waller, 2004). This once iconic species has turned into an ecological villain and human health threat, yet modern societies struggle to find ap‐ propriate responses (Sterba, 2012). High deer populations and their impact on primary producer di‐ versity and abundance led to dramatic abundance declines in forest macrolepidoptera specialized on understory plant species in New Jersey (Schweitzer, Garris, McBride, & Smith, 2014). Browse intensity on red oak seedlings is a function of the deer population size

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call