How cost effective would drone use be? That would be their deciding factor I’d imagine.
I imagine it would be pretty effective.
On a similar scope - I have a bunch of acres in NRCS/EQUIP. The state forester covers 3-4 counties and must walk, inventory, mark, and perform other tasks in wooded hills throughout the area, write up plans, submit bureaucratic paperwork, and meet with landowners to sign them, among other responsibilities. Now, this isn't at the township level, but having a GPS drone or hiring a crew to collect accurate DPSM data or use thermals on airplanes, I believe, could be the absolute new wave of DPSM data and state management.
I would pay 2-3x license cost if I knew this type of management could be used/implemented. With all the dollars going towards CWD, I think there is a strong lobbying pitch for FED dollars to help us better understand the actual densities, and how this may or may not impact the spread.
I ran some numbers on this based on some AI figures I could research
- 3 multirotors: plan on ~8 hours to cover a standard Ohio township.
- 3 fixed-wings: plan on ~6–7.5 hours.
That is the time it would take to cover a standard township. This is not trying to locate big bucks; this is deer density. There are roughly 1308 townships in Ohio.
That comes out to be around 400+/- working days for the entire state.
If you break this down by county - avg. townships 15 per county
A 3-drone crew, running 8 hours per day, will take around 15 days to survey an entire county.
If we assume 30 dollars per hour or 55 per hour per operator, see the stats below to do the entire state.
$30/hr scenario:
- Low: 10,030×88=882,64010,030 \times 88 = 882,64010,030×88=882,640
- High: 10,700×88=941,60010,700 \times 88 = 941,60010,700×88=941,600
$883K–$942K for the state
$55/hr scenario:
- Low: 18,400×88=1,619,20018,400 \times 88 = 1,619,20018,400×88=1,619,200
- High: 19,600×88=1,724,80019,600 \times 88 = 1,724,80019,600×88=1,724,800
$1.62M–$1.72M for the state
Statewide cost to survey all 88 Ohio counties with 3 drones & 3 operators:
- $883K–$942K at $30/hr/operator
- $1.62M–$1.72M at $55/hr/operator
I believe the Ohio Division of Wildlife budget comes out to be $98 MM per year (I could be wrong). This seems like a drop in the bucket, or you could raise tags by $5 per year, and more than enough (assuming these estimates are even close). $5 per 431,000 tags = 2.155MM dollars!
The point being, I think that if my dumb ass can come up with a logical way to find, fund, and quantify harvest data that would put Ohio in the TOP of the TOP deer hunting states, I am certain it could be done efficiently. Not to mention obtaining and targeting funding from third-party sources, such as NDA, Fed, etc.