Mandatory reporting, for or against and why?

Should states have mandatory harvest reporting?

  • Yes

    Votes: 84 93.3%
  • No

    Votes: 6 6.7%

  • Total voters
    90

MichaelO

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Nov 29, 2018
Messages
167
Seems to be a lot of strong opinions about mandatory harvest reporting around here. This has been done pretty successfully in a lot of eastern states with deer and turkey. Are you for or against and why?
 

chindits

WKR
Joined
Feb 25, 2013
Messages
673
Location
Westslope, CO
No. Harvest rates have no bearing on actual herd size in this part of western Colorado. Year to year harvests vary with weather. I know most of you know that early season snows can disproportionately effect harvest rates, but so can drought. The drought two years ago had elk in huge winter herds down in the sage early. So what do you say, huge harvest rates so there must be a lot of elk out there? Let’s do the opposite scenario, good winter snow and a wet summer. Forage and moisture everywhere. Then you have a mild fall. All through hunting season the elk are scattered from timberline to aspen/sage ecotone. Few are harvesting elk because of this. Does that indicate anything about the size of the herd or did it just tell you success rates were down.

Then you fly the winter range in late winter and you find out the only number that matters to set next years tag limits. How many elk are in a position to make it to spring and what your bull/cow ratio is.
 
Joined
Feb 22, 2020
Messages
82
Seems to be a lot of strong opinions about mandatory harvest reporting around here. This has been done pretty successfully in a lot of eastern states with deer and turkey. Are you for or against and why?
I think that it should be so in some units isnt over hunted and others under hunted.
 

LostArra

WKR
Joined
May 9, 2013
Messages
3,481
Location
Oklahoma
YES
There is no downside to reporting your "harvest" (I hate that word for animals).

I don't buy any of chindits opposing views. There is a lot more info to be gained from knowing what your hunters are experiencing in the field. Data from a single year does not determine anything but data over an extended time period is important. And if you aren't managing for the hunters, what are you managing for?

A simple phone app can give G&F a lot of data in under 5 minutes.



No disrespect chindrits. We just disagree and I bet we both want the same result.
 

One-shot

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Dec 4, 2018
Messages
161
Location
Spring Creek, Nevada
Totally support mandatory reporting of harvest as necessary for maintaining and managing herd numbers and overall health/conditions. Often we have to turn in tissue samples - brain etc to test for CWD. It hasn’t hit our state yet - hopefully it won’t. The reporting helps the game biologist get.an on-the-ground feel for hunter success rates, what’s being taken, accidental kills or wounds... Really important data so we can keep herds healthy and thriving.
 

gbflyer

WKR
Joined
Feb 20, 2017
Messages
1,594
Even in Alaska we have mandatory reporting. Seems like a pretty good tool for the biologists. Takes a few minutes online. They send you a nice reminder via email with a link.
 

cnelk

WKR
Joined
Mar 1, 2012
Messages
6,862
Location
Colorado
Colorado already has mandatory reporting for bear, moose, sheep and goat. Must be a good reason for this.

Why not include elk and deer? Or eliminate mandatory reporting all together for all species?
 

pirogue

WKR
Joined
Jun 28, 2012
Messages
1,091
Mandatory reporting sounds like Democrat Libtards are ruling the system. And you mention Eastern states successful? Some of those haven’t even allowed hunting on Sunday. Come on! G & F employees get paid for being out and making surveys. Should not be mandatory.
 

slick

WKR
Joined
Feb 13, 2014
Messages
1,798
And if you aren't managing for the hunters, what are you managing for?.

Landowners and at sometimes the herd itself (ewe tags for the Taylor Hilgards in MT)



Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

Bucky

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Oct 30, 2018
Messages
269
Location
Wisconsin
I always laugh at this question. Same as many above; why wouldn’t you want the most accurate actual harvest numbers.. herd populations can still be counted/estimated in the winter bad done currently.

Dnr herein WI wants accurate salmon harvests- they send Dnr surveyors to every boat launch up and down lake shore to physically count fish caught for a time frame.
 
OP
M

MichaelO

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Nov 29, 2018
Messages
167
I always laugh at this question. Same as many above; why wouldn’t you want the most accurate actual harvest numbers.. herd populations can still be counted/estimated in the winter bad done currently.

Dnr herein WI wants accurate salmon harvests- they send Dnr surveyors to every boat launch up and down lake shore to physically count fish caught for a time frame.
why not use the same system they already use for whitetail? I have experienced the same fish counters in Indiana and it seems archaic and silly to waste someone’s time with something that could be done via an app.
 

LostArra

WKR
Joined
May 9, 2013
Messages
3,481
Location
Oklahoma
Every day we hear about wolves and bears decimating calf numbers but wolves and bears report nothing so no one really knows. Colorado surveys about a fourth of the licenses sold and estimate 50,000 elk are killed. Why not just ask the guys killing them?

A 15 yr old techie could have a phone app up and running in a week
 

Big Dunc

FNG
Joined
Feb 17, 2020
Messages
36
Yes, reporting is a good way to get data. BUT I hate how fish and game employees talk about it like a cure all. It is ONE tool in the shed. There is a lot of other information that plays into herd health and management.
 
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