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What is Quality Deer Management?

Quality Deer Management (QDM) is a management philosophy/practice that unites landowners, hunters, and managers in a common goal of producing biologically and socially balanced deer herds within existing environmental, social, and legal constraints. This approach typically involves the protection of young bucks (yearlings and some 2.5 year-olds) combined with an adequate harvest of female deer to maintain a healthy population in balance with existing habitat conditions and landowner desires. This level of deer management involves the production of quality deer (bucks, does, and fawns), quality habitat, quality hunting experiences, and, most importantly, quality hunters.

A successful QDM program requires an increased knowledge of deer biology and active participation in management. This level of involvement extends the role of the hunter from mere consumer to manager. The progression from education to understanding, and finally to respect, bestows an ethical obligation upon the hunter to practice sound deer management. Consequently, to an increasing number of landowners and hunters, QDM is a desirable alternative to traditional management which allows the harvest of any legal buck and few, if any, does.

QDM guidelines are formulated according to property-specific objectives, goals and limitations. Participating hunters enjoy both the tangible and intangible benefits of this approach. Pleasure can be derived from each hunting experience regardless if a shot is fired. What is important is the chance to harvest a quality buck - an opportunity lacking on many areas under traditional management. When a quality buck is taken on a QDM area, the pride can be shared by all property hunters because it was they who produced it by allowing it to reach the older age classes which are necessary for large bodies and antlers.

 

1 1/2 Years Old
2 1/2 Years Old
3 1/2 Years Old
4 1/2 Years Old
LET HIM GO SO HE CAN GROW

As this sequence of photographs, by Charles Alsheimer, illustrates, antler development increases rapidly with age when bucks are allowed to reach at least 4 1/2 years old in high quality habitats. However, due to heavy harvest of young bucks by hunters across much of the nation, less than 5% of bucks survive to this age. Research has shown that average antler development in yearling bucks represent only 10 to 20 percent of their future antler development compared to 80 to 90 percent for 4 1/2 year old bucks.

 
 
QDMA Mission Statement:
The Quality Deer Management Association (QDMA) is a non-profit wildlife conservation organization dedicated to promoting sustainable, high quality white-tailed deer populations, wildlife habitats, and ethical hunting experiences through education, research, and management in partnership with hunters, landowners, natural resource professionals, and the public.
 
The size of a scrape is a reliable indicator of the size and age of the buck that created it.  Mature bucks paw scrapes that are minimally 18 inches in diameter, and sometimes up to 4 feet.  
 
   
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