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Location
Asheville, North Carolina
Start Date
3-10-1993 12:00 AM
Description
The landscape of New Jersey is remarkably rich in vegetation and open space, despite the state's reputation as the nation's most populous state. This landscape is increasingly the product of intense interaction between the white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) and both native and cultivated vegetation, particularly in suburban communities, where both the whitetail and the vegetation coexist in abundance. Nearly extirpated at the tum of the century due to over-hunting, the state's white-tailed deer population today exceeds 140,000 because habitat is ideal and hunting seasons are carefully regulated. In many instances, where landowners choose not to use hunting as a management tool, deer herds quickly exceed the cultural carrying capacity.
Recommended Citation
Heinrich, H. H., & Predl, S. (1993). Can we landscape to accommodate deer? The Tracy Estate Research Garden. In King, M. M. (Ed.), The Sixth Eastern Wildlife Damage Control Conference (pp. 102-112). Asheville, NC: Clemson University.
Included in
Can We Landscape to Accommodate Deer? The Tracy Estate Research Garden
Asheville, North Carolina
The landscape of New Jersey is remarkably rich in vegetation and open space, despite the state's reputation as the nation's most populous state. This landscape is increasingly the product of intense interaction between the white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) and both native and cultivated vegetation, particularly in suburban communities, where both the whitetail and the vegetation coexist in abundance. Nearly extirpated at the tum of the century due to over-hunting, the state's white-tailed deer population today exceeds 140,000 because habitat is ideal and hunting seasons are carefully regulated. In many instances, where landowners choose not to use hunting as a management tool, deer herds quickly exceed the cultural carrying capacity.