OO2
Well-Known Member
I love that Ohio’s upland game birds are getting air time on this forum. While predation plays a part, it is not the #1 limiting factor to upland game species in Ohio, the lack of quality upland habitat is.
The density of upland predators in Kansas is 200% greater than Ohio, but KS has 1.5M more acres of upland habitat. This yields a significant difference in annual harvest.
From my AI assistant: In the 1940s, Ohio had an estimated 5 million pheasants. At that time, the landscape was roughly a 50/50 mix of cropland and undisturbed grassland. Today, Ohio’s wild pheasant population is estimated at only 35,000 birds. The predators (foxes, raccoons, hawks) existed in the 1940s as well; the variable that changed was the removal of 750,000+ acres of native prairie and the loss of fencerows/small-grain agriculture.
Ohio will never be Kansas, but the numbers show that habitat is the number 1 factor to upland game bird success.
Ruffed grouse used to thrive in OH, then the forestry industry shifted and early successional habitat that was beneficial to grouse was reduced. Now hunters go to MI where forestry management are conducive to grouse.
The density of upland predators in Kansas is 200% greater than Ohio, but KS has 1.5M more acres of upland habitat. This yields a significant difference in annual harvest.
From my AI assistant: In the 1940s, Ohio had an estimated 5 million pheasants. At that time, the landscape was roughly a 50/50 mix of cropland and undisturbed grassland. Today, Ohio’s wild pheasant population is estimated at only 35,000 birds. The predators (foxes, raccoons, hawks) existed in the 1940s as well; the variable that changed was the removal of 750,000+ acres of native prairie and the loss of fencerows/small-grain agriculture.
Ohio will never be Kansas, but the numbers show that habitat is the number 1 factor to upland game bird success.
Ruffed grouse used to thrive in OH, then the forestry industry shifted and early successional habitat that was beneficial to grouse was reduced. Now hunters go to MI where forestry management are conducive to grouse.