Oh Deer!
Contraception shows promise, but other measures may be needed to lessen the toll that the deer boom is having on forests and suburbs
- By Anne Broache
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2005, Subscribe
"Put your chest on the deer. Reach out and hold the legs. Never let go of the hooves."
Bill McShea, a wildlife biologist at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C., is instructing a handful of assistants in the art of subduing a wild white-tailed deer. The researchers are in Virginia's Blue Ridge Mountains on a warm morning, the mowed grass along the boundary of the woods still gleaming with dew. The night before, the group had sprinkled a trail of alfalfa pellets into five deer traps, wooden boxes about five feet tall with doors that fall shut when a deer steps inside and trips a string. This animal went for the bait.
"It's a feisty one," an assistant says, listening to the thumping hooves.
McShea and co-workers guide the deer through a door in the trap into a smaller box, then pull the squirming nearly 100-pound animal out by its hind legs. Two people pin it to the ground, and each grabs a set of kicking legs. Another helper covers its eyes with a dark towel. "That'll take 90 percent of the fight out of the deer," says McShea. The animal is female, so McShea reaches for a syringe and injects her in the rump.
The syringe contains an experimental contraceptive drug. McShea and others are testing, first, whether it will reliably block a doe's reproductive cycle for life and, second, whether birth control drugs could possibly make a dent in America's deer population boom. When it comes to controlling deer populations, McShea says, "You want to have as many tools as possible."
Once overhunted, white-tailed deer have returned in such explosive numbers that they're ravaging forestland and besieging rural and even suburban communities. The animals cause car accidents, carry ticks that can transmit infectious diseases to people, chew up landscaping and otherwise make pests of themselves, albeit sometimes strikingly graceful ones.
Deer numbers are rising in part because their traditional predators, including mountain lions and gray wolves, were eliminated from most Eastern forests long ago. Also, white-tailed deer reproduce quickly—a female bears one to three fawns each year—and they're one of the more adaptable species around, living from subarctic to tropical climates. Past restrictions on deer hunting have also fueled the boom.
But deer are also thriving because of the ways people have carved up the countryside, unwittingly creating prime deer habitat. Deer, says McShea, are an "edge species," meaning they thrive where forests meet fields. They seek shelter in forests, but most forest food is too high for them to reach. Edges abound in plants deer can munch. "Originally, the eastern United States was one deep, dark forest," McShea says. "Now it's deer nirvana. It's one big edge."
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Comments (1)
I am looking for information on a NEW EPA-approved immunocontraceptive for white-tailed deer, the kind we have here in eth East. Developed by the Patuxent National Wildlife Reseach Center, Drug #56228-4 requires a single shot, lasts 1-4 years for females and reduces in males aggressive behavior and causes loss of interest in oestrous females. I am trying to find a viable alternative to the cruel and inefficient bow hunt kills which my community in Anne Arundel County, Maryland has been wasting part of our association dues on for eight years with no appreciable reduction in deer presence and damage to flowers. I want to bring this information before our Board of Directors in hopes of ending the bowhunting with a better alternative.
Posted by patricia Collier on November 23,2009 | 04:41 PM