![]() |
||
|
SREL Reprint #2922
|
||
|
|
Harvestable Natural Resources: White-Tailed Deer Paul E. Johns1 and John C. Kilgo2 1Savannah
River Ecology Laboratory, PO Drawer E, Aiken, SC 29802 Abstract:
From
a public relations standpoint, the white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus)
is probably the most important wildlife species occurring on the Savannah
River Site (SRS). The SRS deer herd has been the subject of more scientific
investigations than any comparable deer population in the world, resulting
in more than 125 published papers. Each year more than 5,500 people apply
to be drawn for one of the public hunts, and with articles in hunting
magazines such as Buckmasters (Handley 2000), hunters have applied from
as far away as Alaska and Italy. In thirty-six years on the SRS, over
150,000 hunters have harvested over 40,000 deer. Each deer harvested in
South Carolina brings an estimated $1,500 into state and local economies
(U.S. Department of Interior et al. 1997). SREL Reprint #2922 Johns, P. E. and J. C. Kilgo. 2005. Harvestable Natural Resources: White-Tailed Deer. pp. 380-389 In J. C. Kilgo and J. I. Blake (Eds.). Ecology and Management of a Forested Landscape: Fifty Years on the Savannah River Site. Island Press.
|
|