Are You Shooting Enough Does? How QDM Fatigue Is Hurting Deer Herds
Description
In this episode, we break down one of the most common questions in whitetail deer management: How many deer—especially does—should you harvest each season? Hunters often rely on guesses, trail-cam photos, or instinct, but Dr. Bronson Strickland, one of the leading experts in deer biology and habitat management, explains how to use forage capacity, herd size, buck-to-doe ratios, and fawn recruitment to make science-based harvest decisions.
Dr. Strickland walks us through evaluating habitat quality, recognizing signs of overbrowsing, understanding how much deer truly eat, and determining a healthy buck-to-doe ratio. We also explore the impact of skewed ratios on rut timing, fawn health, and overall herd performance.
Then we shift to the technology side with Paragon Aerial Solutions, leaders in thermal drone deer surveys. They explain how modern aerial counts determine accurate herd numbers, prevent double-counting, measure buck-to-doe ratios, estimate fawn recruitment, and identify where deer actually spend time on the property. We discuss survey accuracy, cost-per-acre, seasonal timing, property size limitations, and how drone data integrates with mapping apps like OnX and HuntStand.
Whether you're managing small acreage or a large hunting property, this episode gives you a full, science-driven roadmap: forage capacity → deer demand → herd size → ratios → fawn recruitment → harvest goals. Perfect for landowners, habitat managers, and anyone wanting to improve their whitetail herd using real data, not guesses.
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