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Wisconsin’s deer harvest down, except in the north

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Hunters killed thousands fewer deer during Wisconsin’s nine-day gun season this year than in 2020, although the harvest in northern counties was up significantly, according to preliminary state Department of Natural Resources data released Monday.

The DNR offers multiple deer hunting seasons each fall but the nine-day season remains the pinnacle for hunters. It began at dawn on Nov. 20 and ran until nightfall Sunday. Hunters killed 175,667 deer, down 8% from the 190,646 animals killed during the 2020 nine-day stretch. The number of bucks killed was down 1.3% from last year. The antlerless take was down 13%.

Hunters killed 9.3% more deer in the northern forest management zone this year than last, the only one of the state’s four management zones that saw an increase. The southern farmland zone, which includes most of the southern third of the state, saw a 17% drop in kills.

In Florence County, the buck harvest was up 40% as hunters took 777 antlered deer compared to 554 in 2020. The overall harvest was up only 16%, rising to 921, as hunters killed 144 antlerless deer, down from 243 a year ago.

Forest County’s overall harvest was 904 deer, an increase of 42%. The total included 753 bucks, up from 545, and 151 antlerless deer, up from 92.

In the northern Marinette County forest zone, the overall harvest was 1,671, an increase of 56%. The buck harvest was up by 42%, rising from 944 in 2020 to 1,341 this year. The antlerless harvest was 330, up from 127.

The number of hunters who could have ventured into the woods remained virtually unchanged from 2020. The DNR reported it had sold 564,440 hunting licenses that would allow someone to kill a deer using a gun during any of the state’s multiple gun seasons as of the Sunday close. That’s down about 0.8% from the 564,440 licenses sold at the same point last year.

The DNR offers only one firearm deer license that allows the holder to participate in any of the state’s deer gun seasons. The agency doesn’t track which license holders participate in each season.

DNR Deer Program Specialist Jeff Pritzl called the diminished numbers in the south “eye-catching” but could offer no explanation for the lower kill rate.

The DNR issued a news release saying weather conditions were generally good, although a lack of snow may have hindered visibility and wetlands weren’t frozen over, making access difficult.

Pritzl speculated that more hunters may have opted for bow hunting — that season runs from mid-September to the end of January — and success on those outings may have kept them home during the nine-day gun season. As of Tuesday, bow hunters had taken almost 36,000 deer. Hunters also may be waiting for the state’s muzzleloader season, which began Monday and runs through Dec. 8, or the December antlerless only season, he said.

“If you asked 10 deer hunters about their experience over the last week, how often they hunted and whether they decided to take a deer or not, you’d get 10 different answers,” Pritzl said.

“It’s probably more complicated than making a presumption right now about one particular thing that was going on,” he said.

The DNR recorded five firearm-related injuries and one fatality during the nine-day season.

Three incidents involved unintentional self-inflicted wounds. In Door County, a 45-year-old man was unloading his gun on Nov. 21 when he shot a 10-year-old boy. The boy was taken to a hospital and treated. In Iron County, a 65-year-old man was moving around on Nov. 23 when he knocked over his gun and it discharged, striking another 65-year-old man in the chest. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

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