I just don't understand how you come up with these examples and completely fail to consider reproduction. You act like the remaining "un-dead" deer population is just a static number that will never increase, but instead just decrease year after year. Deer are extremely adaptable and successful at reproducing... Hence the population boom since they were nearly extinct in Ohio in the early 1900s. What I'm saying is I don't think a decrease in the population can be solely attributed to hunting and extra tags and extra time in the woods. If the population is falling off a cliff as fast as everyone here thinks it is, there HAS to be other causes. That is, unless the estimated statewide population is WAY off... But until someone proves that to me I'm not going to believe that it is. You know a population of 750,000 is only an average of 28 deer per 1000 acres in Ohio? IMO, that's not a very far-fetched density.
Brock and I are touching on that now. My cameras show less fawns from less does than the averages from 2006-2007. I have WAY more coyotes on cam this year than ever before. We did have nothing bow twin fawn throwing does and now, down to one doe that threw twins this summer. With there simply being less deer who for whatever reason are now having less fawns, it could mean reproduction is actually could be a static number. Add in what has to be a higher fawn mortality rates given more predators and less targets, it is more than just the neighborhood who pounding the deer herd...