huntn2
Senior Member
I'll be the first to admit that I've backed Tonkovich from day one... But I'd really like to hear him try to explain this one. I don't see any plausible reasoning other than a decrease in deer.
The explanation is easy...all they use for herd estimation is the harvest data per what Mike Rex shared.
If herd population remained flat as has been reported while annual vehicle miles traveled increased significantly, statistically, deer-vehicle accidents would increase simply due to more miles being traveled. To see a 23% decline when considering the increase in drivers and vehicle miles blows me away.
Did the deer learn to avoid roads?
Did drivers learn to pay attention while distractions have increased?
Have people decided to not report the accident or file a claim to get their vehicle repaired?
I hope someone can help justify this one for me because I haven't been able to come up with a sound reason as to how this is possible. It tells me either the deer-vehicle claims are too low or the deer population estimate is too high...
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