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DEC Announces 2018-19 Deer Harvest Estimates

April 08, 2019   03:00 p.m.
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    Press Release from NYS DEC:

    DEC Announces 2018-19 Deer Harvest Estimates

    Hunters in New York Harvested 12 Percent More Deer than Last Season

    DEC Tested More than 2,000 Deer and Continue to Find No Evidence of CWD

    Hunters in New York harvested an estimated 227,787 deer during the 2018-19
    hunting seasons, approximately 12 percent more than the previous season, State
    Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) Commissioner Basil Seggos
    announced today.

    "Hunting benefits all New Yorkers by reducing negative impacts of deer on
    forests, agricultural crops, and communities, while contributing an estimated
    $690 million to the state's economy through hunting-related expenses and
    license purchases, which helps support conservation and resource management
    efforts at DEC," said Commissioner Seggos.

    The estimated deer take included 114,402 antlerless deer and 113,385 antlered
    bucks. Statewide, this represents a 20-percent increase in antlerless harvest and
    a five-percent increase in buck harvest from the last season. The increase in
    antlerless harvest comes on the heels of a lower-than-desired antlerless harvest
    in 2017 and will help limit growth in areas with an overpopulation. Regionally,
    hunters took 28,642 deer in the Northern Zone and 199,145 deer in the Southern
    Zone. With nearly 60 percent of the adult buck harvest 2.5 years or older,
    hunters took an estimated 66,697 older bucks, setting another record in the
    percentage and total number of older bucks in the harvest.

    "Whether through organized deer hunting cooperatives or due to personal
    decisions, it's exciting to see how the voluntary choice of hunters to Let Young
    Bucks Go and Watch Them Grow is shifting our buck harvest," Seggos said.
    "Many hunters desire to see older, large bucks on the landscape, and as hunters
    choose to pass on shots at young bucks, that change is happening."

    In addition, hunters increased the rate at which they reported their harvest in
    2018, for the second year in a row. Although harvest reporting is required by law,
    the portion of successful hunters who report their harvest has averaged around
    45 percent for the past decade. Hunters have increased their reporting rates to
    50 percent in 2017, and 51 percent in 2018. Along with DEC's Take It · Tag It ·
    Report It campaign, the agency has made the process of harvest reporting easier
    for hunters by providing phone, internet, and mobile app options. Harvest reports
    are critically important for accurate monitoring of deer harvests, and DEC hopes
    hunters continue to contribute to the management process by complying with the
    reporting requirements.

    DEC's 2018 Deer Harvest Summary report (PDF) provides tables, charts, and
    maps detailing the deer harvest around the state. Past harvest summaries are
    available on DEC's website.


















































    Notable Numbers

  • 16.1 and 0.7 --- number of deer taken per square mile in the units with the
    highest (WMU 8R) and lowest (WMUs 5F, 6F and 6J) harvest density.
  • 58.8 percent --- portion of the adult buck harvest that was 2.5 years or
    older, the greatest in New York history and up from 40 percent a decade
    ago, and 30 percent in the 1990s. Excluding units with mandatory antler
    restrictions, 54.5 percent of the adult bucks harvested were older bucks, still
    the greatest percentage on record.
  • 65 percent --- portion of eligible junior hunters that participated in the 2016
    Youth Deer Hunt.
  • 15,499 --- number of hunter-harvested deer checked by DEC staff in 2018.
  • 2,483 --- deer tested for Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) in 2018-19; none
    tested positive. DEC has tested more than 52,000 deer for CWD since 2002.

    Deer harvest data are gathered from two main sources: harvest reports required
    of all successful hunters and DEC's examination of more than 15,000 harvested
    deer at check stations and meat processors across the state. Harvest estimates
    are made by cross-referencing these two data sources and calculating the total
    harvest from the reporting rate for each zone and tag type. A full report of the
    2018-19 deer harvest, as well as past deer and bear harvest summaries, is
    available at DEC's Deer and Bear Harvests webpage.

    No CWD Detections in NYS in 2018

    DEC tested 2,483 harvested deer across the state and found no evidence of
    Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) in the herd.

    "Preventing the introduction of CWD into New York is a high priority for DEC to
    ensure the health of our deer herd and to protect the recreational and viewing
    opportunities deer provide," Seggos said.

    CWD has now been found in 26 states, with Mississippi and Tennessee joining
    the list in 2018. Environmental Conservation Police Officers (ECOs) stepped up
    enforcement efforts this past year, seizing and destroying hunter-killed deer
    brought in illegally from states where CWD has been found. CWD continues to
    pose a threat to New York's wild white-tailed deer herd. Chronic wasting disease
    is a highly contagious disease that affects deer, elk, moose, and reindeer. CWD
    is always fatal and there are no vaccines or treatments available. CWD is
    believed to be caused by a prion, which is an infectious protein, that can infect
    animals through animal-to-animal contact or contaminated environments.

    DEC has tested more than 52,000 wild white-tailed deer for CWD since 2002. In
    2005, CWD was found in both captive and wild white-tailed deer in Oneida
    County. After intensive disease response efforts, no subsequent cases have
    been detected. In the 2018-2019 surveillance period, 2,371 samples were tested
    from hunter-harvested deer and 112 from clinical deer that appeared sick or
    abnormal. DEC partners with cooperating meat processors and taxidermists in
    obtaining samples for testing each year.

    For wildlife diseases like CWD, prevention is the most effective management
    policy. DEC recommends several practices hunters can take to prevent the
    introduction of infectious prions:

  • Debone your deer before you bring it back to New York. This practice
    removes "high risk" parts (brain, spinal cord) that could potentially spread
    CWD. If you bring a whole, intact carcass from a prohibited state, province,
    or any high-fence shooting facility, you will be ticketed and your entire
    animal (including trophy heads) will be confiscated and destroyed. Meat,
    hide and cape, antlers, cleaned skull cap with antlers attached, finished
    taxidermy mounts, tanned hides, and clean upper canine teeth are permitted.
  • Consider alternatives to natural deer urine or lure products. Prions are shed
    in a deer's bodily fluids before the deer appears sick. Commercially
    available urine products are not tested for prions. Prions bind to soil and
    plants and remain infectious to deer that ingest contaminated soil. There is
    no method of disinfection.
  • Dispose of carcass waste, even from New York deer, into a proper waste
    stream either by putting butcher scraps in with your household trash or
    otherwise assuring it goes to a licensed landfill. A landowner may dispose of
    their own deer on their property, but it is illegal in all cases for businesses
    (butchers and taxidermists) to dispose of waste generated from their
    business in any way other than a landfill or rendering facility.
  • Do not feed wild deer or moose. Animals concentrated together can spread
    disease quickly.

    If there is another CWD outbreak in New York, DEC and the State Department of
    Agriculture and Markets will implement their Interagency CWD Response Plan.
    The plan will guide actions if the disease is detected in either captive cervids-any
    species of the deer family-or wild white-tailed deer or moose. There are no
    documented cases of CWD infecting humans, but DEC urges caution when
    handling or processing CWD-susceptible animals.

    For more of what DEC is doing and what you should know about CWD, visit
    DEC's website.