State biologists on Tuesday unveiled a plan to increase the number of any-deer permits to 84,745. That total is about 8,000 higher than ever allotted in Maine.
The total number of any-deer permits is determined after a three-step rulemaking process that takes place with the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife advisory council, which met on Tuesday. The previous high-water mark for any-deer permits came in 2002, when 76,989 permits were allotted.
A year ago, during the 2017 deer hunting season, the state increased the level of any-deer permits to 66,050, up from 45,755 in 2016 and 28,770 in 2015.
A memo presented to the advisory council, written by DIF&W deer biologist Nathan Bieber, said that a mild to moderate winter in central and southern Maine led to average to above-average deer survival in those regions; a severe winter in northern Maine led to below-average survival rates.
“For 2018, we recommend a total of 84,745 permits to be issued across 22 [Wildlife Management Districts] to meet our doe harvest objective of 8,909 does,” Bieber wrote in the memo. “Deer populations in WMDs 1, 4, 5, 10, 11, 19 and 28 remain below goal and will remain as bucks-only harvest.”
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