| |
WHITETAIL DEER EAT NATIVE PLANTS 1
By Mark Thomas, RF, CF, AWB, ACF
(Click here
for specifics)
Whitetail
deer rely primarily on native plants for BILLION pounds
of native plant food required in a food. These plants can
be divided into three main decade if the deer population
remained stable in groups depending on the natural preference
in which deer will consume them. First choice foods consist
of succulent herbaceous plants like Alabama supplejack,
greenbrier, blackberry, lespedeza, and, in the early spring,
common ragweed.
Second choice foods will start to be consumed when most
of the preferred foods are depleted. They include species
like American beauty and sumac and some of the more woody
browse like red maple, red mulberry and flowering dogwood.
Third choice foods are sometimes called emergency foods
or stuffers, and include sweetgum, blackjack oak, hickory,
Eastern redbud and cedar. Whitetail deer preferentially
browse the most preferred plants first, utilizing less desirable
browse later until they are finally forced to browse on
emergency/stuffer foods. If you lack herbaceous plants on
your property and there is a browse line on your hardwoods
and your cedars look like bonsai's, you have a serious whitetail
deer overpopulation problem.
This, sadly, occurs on many properties.
Think for a moment about the incredible amount of native
plant materials that are consumed annually by whitetail
deer. A single whitetail deer consumes an average of around
eight pounds of plant material daily (green weight) or over
3,000 pounds a year. That does not sound like all that much
does it? But let's look at the annual consumption in a single
state and then look at the entire whitetail deer range.
Let's say that the state of Alabama, for example, has approximately
2.8 million whitetail deer which each consume an average
of 8.25 pounds of native plants daily or 3,011 pounds annually.
This equates to over 4.2 MILLION TONS of native plants required
ANNUALLY! That's over 8 BILLION pounds of native plants
consumed per year deer in a single state. This would equate
to over 80
Alabama.

There are approximately 32 million whitetail deer in the
United States today. This population is considered super
overabundant and is substantially higher than at any time
since pre-recorded history. The whitetail deer population
in the United States consumes approximately 132,000 TONS
of native plant foods daily or almost 50 MILLION TONS of
native plants annually! This equates to almost 100 BILLION
POUNDS of native plant foods consumed per year in the range
of the whitetail deer in the United States. And the whitetail
deer population is still increasing rapidly.
What further complicates this is the fact that exotic, non-native
and invasive plants are displacing our native plant communities
at an alarming rate. We are losing over 4,500 acres per
day of native plants. Other wildlife species also consume
native plants. Elk, mule deer, antelope and moose populations
are all over I million animals each in North America. Moose,
for example, consume an average of between 40 and 60 pounds
of native plants per day. In Maine, for example, a population
of around 35,000 moose consume around 2 million pounds of
native plants per day. This equates to almost 1,000 tons
per day, or over 325,000 tons of browse consumed each year
by moose in Maine.
Whitetail deer are selective feeders. They choose native
plants with considerable discrimination and, in actuality,
consume a variety of different foods including vines, mushrooms,
nuts, fruits, grasses, sedges, rushes, forbs, shrubs and
twigs from trees. They tend to select succulent herbaceous
plants first and turn to woody plant materials later. Food
plots utilizing agricultural plants can be a source of highly
nutritional food, as can agricultural fields. But, primarily,
whitetail deer rely on native plants for the bulk of their
diet.
There is, however, little emphasis placed
on enhancing native plant communities and little information
available that explains exactly how to do it. Yet, it is
relatively easy with long-lasting positive impacts usually
at a fraction of the cost of establishing and maintaining
agricultural food plots. Research has shown up to 40-fold
increases in highly preferred native plants with protein
contents of 26 to 32%, much higher than the 12-18% minimum
required by whitetail deer. And, native plant communities
are seldom impacted by drought. Selective herbicides like
imazapyr (see sidebar) actually release many native plants
preferred by whitetail deer and bobwhite quail.
Other desirable native plants are promoted during forest
management activities, especially clear cutting (see sidebar).
It's amazing how many hunters still do not understand how
forest management activities improve whitetail deer food
availability. Undoubtedly, the most food available on any
hunting club is right in the middle of the most recent clear
cut. Mid-rotation pine forests released with imazapyr also
have an abundance of native plants preferred by whitetail
deer.
The next time you observe a whitetail deer browsing, remember
that 100 billion pounds of native plants are consumed each
year by whitetail deer in the United States. This is why
so many of our state parks that are overpopulated with deer
and do not allow hunting are essentially biological deserts,
with many deer starving to death each year. Follow the advice
of your deer biologists when they suggest harvest strategies
that reduce deer density by removing does. This will ensure
that your deer population stays within the limits or carrying
capacity of your habitat. This not only promotes healthier
deer but also enhances the buck:doe ratio.
Seek advice pertaining to native plant enhancement and learn
how to identify preferred native plants utilized by whitetail
deer in your area. Follow the Quality Deer Management Association
guidelines on protecting yearling bucks from harvesting,
thus shifting your population to older age class bucks.
And, start looking at forest management activities from
the standpoint of how they can enhance native plants that
are preferred by whitetail deer.
|