Pantheraman
Well-Known Member
I was on a blog I occasionally browse, and I found this rather odd if not disturbing research.
https://www.fs.usda.gov/rm/pubs_journals/2022/rmrs_2022_hanberry_b009.pdf
In my opinion, just like with compassionate conservation towards invasive species and Pleistocene rewilding, I'm skeptical of this.
For one thing, the habitat modifications in the east done by humans have benefitted White-Tailed Deer because they do better in edges and transitional zones between forests and more open habitats than in mature forests because those areas have more food for them. In historic times, the forests would've been thicker than they are now for the simple reason that there weren't as many humans on the landscape. That alone should tell you deer weren't as abundant as they are now.
And second, if deer numbers east of the Mississippi are supposed to be this high, then what's with the ecological cons? Think about the wildebeests on the East African plains. With their huge numbers, one would think all of those wildebeest would hurt the ecosystem but instead, their grazing reduces fuel for wildfires and allows trees to grow, creating food and homes for many other species. This makes them a keystone species. And they aren't damaging the Serengeti ecosystem. Because this particular habitat is supposed to have a huge wildebeest population. In the case of the whitetails, we hear of how their overbrowsing negatively affects birds for example.
@birdsandbats I'm sure you'll have a few things to say about this study.
https://www.fs.usda.gov/rm/pubs_journals/2022/rmrs_2022_hanberry_b009.pdf
In my opinion, just like with compassionate conservation towards invasive species and Pleistocene rewilding, I'm skeptical of this.
For one thing, the habitat modifications in the east done by humans have benefitted White-Tailed Deer because they do better in edges and transitional zones between forests and more open habitats than in mature forests because those areas have more food for them. In historic times, the forests would've been thicker than they are now for the simple reason that there weren't as many humans on the landscape. That alone should tell you deer weren't as abundant as they are now.
And second, if deer numbers east of the Mississippi are supposed to be this high, then what's with the ecological cons? Think about the wildebeests on the East African plains. With their huge numbers, one would think all of those wildebeest would hurt the ecosystem but instead, their grazing reduces fuel for wildfires and allows trees to grow, creating food and homes for many other species. This makes them a keystone species. And they aren't damaging the Serengeti ecosystem. Because this particular habitat is supposed to have a huge wildebeest population. In the case of the whitetails, we hear of how their overbrowsing negatively affects birds for example.
@birdsandbats I'm sure you'll have a few things to say about this study.