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Wildlife Extension Program
Deer Need a Little "Tough Love" in Winter
"However,
most people don't know that some common feeds
can harm deer or change their behavior to the
point that it leads to their destruction."
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by Jim Knight, MSU Extension Wildlife Specialist
12/02/03 BOZEMAN -- The deer you plan to feed over
the winter may need some "tough love" instead.
Just as people have learned that sometimes well-meant
help facilitates unhealthy behavior, so winter feeding
of deer is unhealthy -- or even deadly -- for deer,
says Jim Knight, Montana State University Extension
wildlife specialist.
Feeding seems like a generous answer to starving wildlife
at first, says Knight. However, most people don't know
that some common feeds can harm deer or change their
behavior to the point that it leads to their destruction.
"Many people think that feeding deer in a hard
winter can do nothing but help," says Knight. "That's
not always the case." Knight describes the following
scene he witnessed during the winter of 1996-97.
A tearful woman was talking to a central Montana wildlife
biologist.
"We can’t afford any more food, and the
poor things are dying," the woman complained. "Every
day more and more come to the feeders, but we’re
already spending $100 a month. Isn’t there something
you can do?"
"I’m sorry, ma’am," the wildlife
biologist said, "but you’re drawing deer
from all over the area. They aren’t used to a
diet of hay and corn, so I’m afraid you’re
going to have more of this," he said, pointing
to two frozen carcasses of yearling deer only feet from
hay-filled feeders.
This scene is repeated many times each winter in Montana,
says Knight.
Feeding deer hay or corn can kill them, because they
cannot always digest it. Deer digestion involves protozoa
and bacteria that help break down food. Different micro-organisms
help digest different types of vegetation. If a deer
has been feeding on aspen or willows, it has built up
the micro-organisms that digest only this kind of vegetation.
If this same deer suddenly fills its stomach with corn
or hay, it may not have enough of the corn- and hay-digesting
micro-organisms in its stomach to digest the food. A
deer can starve to death with a full stomach.
In addition, deer can become fixated on a food source,
says Knight. Deer will stay near a sure food source,
even an inadequate one, rather than seek more sufficient
food in other areas.
Once food is discovered, deer concentrate around a
feeder rather than scattering through the available
winter range. Often, they remain in an artificial feeding
area getting only half the food they need rather than
fighting the snow to use natural browse. They quickly
deplete any close-by forage and can stay in a feeder
area until they starve to death. This is why spring
searches often reveal concentrations of dead deer within
the immediate vicinity of feed areas.
So if you still decide to feed deer, you must feed
every day, says Knight. If you become ill and can no
longer feed, the deer that depend on you for food will
suffer. Any interruption, whether due to depleted funds,
a vacation, a snow storm or a midwinter move to a warmer
climate, will eliminate part or all of a deer’s
diet. Once a feeding program starts, it must continue
until spring when delicate new growth lures deer to
resume foraging away from your feeder.
And, another problem is that deer won't "divvy
up" feed equally.
Deer need 3.5 pounds of good browse daily. If you aren't
feeding this much for each one, some will be undernourished.
Even if you provide this much food per deer per day
on average, some deer will eat five pounds leaving other
deer with too little. So some deer will starve.
In addition, artificial feeding makes deer abnormally
competitive.
Competition between deer in natural situations usually
is limited, because natural food sources are scattered.
In artificial feeding situations, deer often become
combative, striking one another with hooves to assure
themselves a share of the food. Young deer, the ones
that need the food most, are kept away by larger or
stronger deer.
Artificial feeding also can spread disease.
When deer are abnormally close to one another, contagious
diseases or parasites are more easily spread. Wildlife
pathologists now suspect that artificially-fed deer
in high populations may develop disorders that lead
to peculiar habits, such as eating hair from themselves
and other deer.
Early last spring, Knight says he had the unpleasant
experience of seeing a yearling buck infested with black,
wort-like growths. These growths, which are caused by
a contagious virus, had completely covered the deer’s
face. The blinded animal was running into fences, trees
and other obstructions and had severely cut itself before
being put out of its misery by a wildlife biologist.
This deer was killed within a half mile of the woman’s
feed station mentioned earlier.
The consequences of artificial feeding mentioned up
to now are direct and easily observed. There are, however,
other less obvious implications.
Many deer visiting feed stations are carrying fawns.
If the food being provided is not as abundant as natural
browse, not only the doe, but also her fawns may be
undernourished.
Artificial feeding may force deer to ignore their instincts.
Deer have evolved to fear man. This has helped them
survive. Artificial feeding forces them to ignore the
presence of people. In some cases, this could be their
downfall.
Finally, artificial feeding would have to increase
infinitely to feed all the animals that would come.
If you found the perfect diet that provided all necessary
nutrients, and if you were able to feed the equivalent
of 3.5 pounds per deer of good browse daily, and if
you were able to get the feed divided equally among
the animals, and if you were able to minimize the spread
of disease due to the animals being closer together
than they would be naturally, even then your problems
would not be at an end.
Next year, the perfectly fed and healthy animals' offspring
would come with their mothers. Each year, you would
need to provide more feed for the new generations.
In truth, you may hurt more deer than you help if you
feed them.
There is a way to help, however.
"Create and maintain a natural habitat and combine
that with proper hunting. It's the only way to minimize
starvation and work for both deer health and humane
treatment," says Knight. "If deer populations
aren't controlled by man or other predators, you will
have starvation."
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