800,000 is the number some people come up with as what it would have taken to produce the number of deer killed during those years. The State says there were 200,000ish hunters from approx 1960 to 1990. Deer harvest in 1961 was reported around 125,000- but that includes buck and doe harvest. The most bucks harvested came in the early 1980s with a harvest in the low 80,000s - but buck to doe ratios in the single digits on many units.
The 800,000 could be valid or not- I have sat in a couple hundred hours of Mule Deer Management meetings and don't remember seeing legit Buck to Doe ratio numbers for the 1960s. I have seen estimates that put it around 10. For the 1980s- the real numbers I have seen usually falls into the single digits to the low teens.
What people sometimes fail to realize is the fawn retention into the 1980s was far higher due to the complete destruction of predators. Back then, fawns hit the ground and lived. Now fawns hit the ground and die.
I honestly think deer numbers were higher back in the day. I can't say if they were 3 times higher than we have today (from around 300,000 today against 800,000-900,000 from back then). I can say there is no way to attain those numbers again without a war on predators, crossing guards for deer, perfect weather, and range rehab.
Herds are not rapidly growing. How many doe deer are they shooting on the Book Cliffs? On the Pauns? The answer to low deer numbers is not thru buck hunters.....
And if Utah had 800,000 deer then this quote published in the late 1960s "Productivity of Mule Deer on the La Sal and Henry Mountains of Utah" should be of interest from those who came before us--
"During the 1950's, Utah experienced high populations of mule deer, and a general deterioration of the habitat resulted. In an attempt to correct this condition, the Utah State Department of Fish and Game and Federal land management agencies embarked on a program to reduce mule deer and livestock numbers to the carrying capacity of the range. Management tools implemented to reduce deer numbers included building access roads, issuing permits for special hunts, and extending hunting seasons."
The higher number of deer degraded the range. They issued special hunts. Cut access roads into secluded places to KILL the deer. So when guys use those harvest numbers to support their theory on populations back then- maybe the numbers were skewed because the UTFG was trying to kill deer- not grow deer in the 1960s.
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