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Wisconsin DNR News, November 13, 2007
« on: November 13, 2007, 03:00:04 PM »
Wisconsin DNR News, November 13, 2007

2007 black bear season harvest
Top 10 most asked gun-deer season questions
A chronology of Wisconsin deer hunting
Report on groundwater conditions available
Wisconsin Drinking Water Fast Facts
Map of contaminated and cleaned up properties available on DNR Web site
DNR increases outreach efforts to Hmong community


2007 black bear season harvest
MADISON -- Preliminary figures indicate hunters harvested more than 2,570 black bears in Wisconsin during the 2007 bear hunting season.  This figure is expected to increase slightly in the next month as remaining registration data is entered and is very close to the 2,650 harvest goal for the 2007 season.
Bayfield, Price, and Sawyer counties led the state, as they did in 2006, with 240, 227, and 189 bears registered respectively.  The preliminary harvest by Bear Management Zone is Zone A: 978, Subzone A1: 610, Zone B: 468, Zone C: 517, and unknown zone: 4.
Hunters submitted 34,975 applications for 4,405 Class A Bear Harvest permits.  A total of 80,245 hunters applied for either a harvest permit or a preference point.  Hunters who apply for but do not receive a Class A harvest permit will receive a preference point for the next year’s drawing.  Depending on the zone applied for, it currently takes five to nine preference points in order to draw a harvest permit.
2008 Season Applications
The deadline for 2008 Black Bear hunting season applications is Dec. 10, 2007. Hunters can apply on-line, through license vendors or by phone
The 2008 bear hunting season will run Sept. 3 through Oct. 7.  Hunters are reminded that for the 2008 bear season, Subzone A1 has been renamed to Zone D.  With this change, Zone A permit holders will no longer be able to cross over into Subzone A1, now Zone D.
The opening week of Wisconsin’s bear hunting season alternates between those hunting bear over bait and those hunting with trailing hounds.  Hunting over bait will go first in 2008 in all management zones. Hunters using trailing hounds will have the first week of the season again in 2009.
2008 bear harvest applications can be purchased over the Internet through the DNR Web site, at any DNR Service Center, at automated license issuance system sales locations, or by calling toll-free 1-877-WI LICENSE (1-877-945-4236).
Information on bear hunting, hunting seasons, and links to online application information can be accessed at bear hunting page of the DNR Web site or at any DNR Service Center or license vendor.
FOR MORE INFORMATION:  contact Keith Warnke - (608) 264-6023 or Linda Olver (608) 261-7588





Top 10 most asked gun-deer season questions
SPOONER, Wis. – Wisconsin’s deer gun hunt is one of the most exciting times of the year for many residents, but it is important for everyone to follow the rules and regulations for gun deer season so that everyone stays safe in the woods.  Here are some answers to the 10 more frequently asked questions: 
1. Can I hunt the day before deer season? No! Hunting is not allowed on the Friday proceeding the gun deer season, except for waterfowl hunting.  A landowner and the family members may sight in firearms on the Friday before the nine-day deer gun season on their private property.  This law does not allow them to hunt, but only to sight in firearms. Firearms may also be sighted in at an established range during this period.
2. Can I take my child hunting without a gun or license? Yes. He or she can tag along to observe the hunt.  We recommend anyone in the woods wear blaze orange.
3. What handguns are legal for deer hunting? Deer may be hunted with handguns loaded with center-fire cartridges of .22 caliber or larger that have a minimum barrel length of 5 1/2 inches measured from the muzzle to the firing pin with the action closed.
4. What are the casing requirements for firearms? The rule is as follows: “Enclosed in a carrying case’ for firearms means completely contained in a gun case expressly made for that purpose which is fully enclosed by being zipped, snapped, buckled, tied or otherwise fastened, with no portion of the firearm exposed.  No person may place, possess or transport a firearm, bow or crossbow in or on a vehicle, unless the firearm is unloaded and encased or unless the bow or crossbow is unstrung or is enclosed in a carrying case. A vehicle includes ATVs and snowmobiles.
5. Can someone else transport my deer after it's legally tagged and registered? Yes. Any person may transport a lawfully taken deer if it is properly tagged and registered, whether they possess a hunting license or not.
6. Once I have killed a deer, can I continue to hunt? Any member of a group gun-deer hunting party may kill a deer for another member of the party with a firearm if both of the following conditions exist:
A) At the time and place of the kill, the person who kills the deer is in contact with the person for whom the deer is killed.  Contact means visual or voice contact without the aid of any mechanical or electronic amplifying device other than a hearing aid. 
B) The person for whom the deer is killed possesses a current, unused deer carcass tag that is authorized for use on the deer killed.  The person killing the deer may not leave the deer unattended until after it is tagged. 
7. Can I hunt small game during the deer season? Yes, if the season is open, and -- with the exception of waterfowl hunting -- if 50 percent of the person's outer clothing above the waist is blaze orange. 
8. Can I use a light to shine wild animals? Persons may not use or possess with intent to use a light for shining any wild animal while hunting or in possession of a firearm, bow and arrow or crossbow.  Further, between Sept. 15 and Dec. 31, during the hours of 10 p.m. to 7 a.m., you may not use any light for shining wild animals.
9. What do I do if I lose my hunter education certificate? Wisconsin law requires that anyone born after Jan. 1, 1973 must have successfully completed a hunter education course before he or she purchases any hunting license.  This certificate must be presented when a license is purchased.  If lost, a duplicate can be obtained by going in person or applying through the mail to a Department of Natural Resources license sales office.  The current fee is $2.75.
10. How close must my 12-year-old son or daughter be to me to be under my supervision? The law states that anyone ages 12 and 13 years old must be accompanied by an adult.  Accompanied means within sight and voice contact (without the aid of any mechanical or electronic amplifying device, other than a hearing aid).
For answers to additional questions, consult the Wisconsin Deer Hunting Regulations pamphlet – available at businesses where licenses are sold, county clerk offices, and all Department of Natural Resources (DNR) offices.





[EDITOR’S ADVISORY: This news release was originally released by the DNR South Central Region Headquarters.]

A chronology of Wisconsin deer hunting from closed seasons to antlerless permits
FITCHBURG, Wis. -- Wisconsin has a long and storied tradition of regulated gun deer hunting, going back to 1851. There have been many changes over the years, but none more dramatic as those experienced by hunters during the 1990’s and early twenty-first century.
1834 – Lafayette County, first reported crop damage by deer.
1851 – First closed season for deer, Feb. 1 – June 30; Indians permitted to hunt anytime.
1876 – Hunting with dogs prohibited statewide.
1887 – Two game wardens appointed by governor at a monthly salary of $50; night hunting prohibited statewide.
1888 – Game laws published in pamphlet form.
1890 – First chief warden appointed.
1892 – Lawful to kill any dog running or hunting deer.
1895 – Sheboygan first county closed to deer hunting; deer cannot be transported unless accompanied by hunter; last October deer season in state.
1897 – First bag limit for deer, two per season; resident license costs $1, nonresident license costs $30; estimated license sales total 12,000.
1900 – Twelve hunters killed by firearms.
1903 – Estimated 78,164 licenses sold.
1905 – Salt licks prohibited.
1909 – Season 20 days long, limit one deer; first civil service exam given on a competitive basis for prospective wardens.
1910 – Deer populations drop to record low numbers due to unregulated hunting and market shooting.
1914 – Twenty-four hunters killed, 26 injured; license sales at 155,000
1915 – First buck only season.
1917 – Shining deer illegal while possessing a firearm; Conservation Commission delegated some powers related to deer season, but legislature retains authority to set seasons; deer tags (paper) required for the first time…they cost 10 cents.
1919 – Estimated kill is 25,152.
1920 – First use of metal deer tags…they cost 10 cents.
1921 – Wardens are instructed that “all deer found in possession…with horns less than three inches in length, is a fawn and should be confiscated.”
1924 – Estimated kill is 7000.
1925 – Legislature passes law closing deer season in alternate years.
1927 – No open season.
1928 – Deer hunters required to wear official conservation button while hunting; Game Division formed with Conservation Department; estimated kill is 17,000 with 69,049 deer tags sold.
1929 – No open season.
1930 – Estimated kill is 23,000 with 70.284 deer tags sold.
1931 – No open season.
1932 – Deer tag price is raised to $1; estimated kill is 36,009 with 70,245 deer tags sold.
1933 – No open season; Conservation Congress, an advisory group representing public opinion registered at annual county hearings, begins to assist the Conservation Commission in establishing a deer management policy.
1934 – First bow deer season; estimated gun kill is 21,251 with 83,939 deer tags sold.
1935 – No open season.
1937 – Shortest deer season on record, three days.
1938 – Use of .22 rifle and .410 shotgun prohibited.
1939 – Licensed children between ages 12 and 16 must be accompanied by parent or guardian; buckshot prohibited statewide.
1941 – Deer predators rare, timber wolves nearing extinction; estimated gun kill is 40,403 with 124,305 deer tags sold.
1942 – Back tags required while deer hunting.
1943 – First doe and fawn season in 24 years.
1945 – First year of ‘shotgun only’ counties; wearing red clothing required while hunting deer.
1950 – First ‘any deer’ season since 1919; estimated gun kill is 167,911 with 312,570 deer tags sold.
1951 – Deer hunting license and tag cost $2.50; orange clothing now included under red clothing law; Wisconsin leads nation in whitetail deer kill for third consecutive year.
1953 – First season gun deer hunters required to register deer at checking station.
1954 – Two-thirds of bucks harvested are less than three years old; portions of Walworth and Waukesha Counties and all of Jefferson County open for the first time since 1906.
1956 – 100th established gun deer season; registered gun kill is 35,562 with 294,645 deer tags sold.
1957 – Legislature authorizes party permit.
1958 – Longest deer season since 1916, 16 days; Rock County open for the first time since 1906; first harvest by deer management unit (in northwest and northeast only); registered gun kill is 95,234, of which 44,987 taken by party permit; 335,866 deer tags and 58,348 party permits sold, respectively.
1959 – First statewide deer registration by unit; Game Management Division of Conservation Department assumes responsibility for coordinating the state’s deer program; first open season in Kenosha County since 1906.
1960 – Hunter not permitted to buy a license after opening day of gun season; Green and Racine Counties open for the first time since 1906; all counties now open except Milwaukee; registered gun kill is 61,005, of which 25,515 taken by party permit; 338,208 deer tags and 47,522 party permits sold, respectively.
1961 – Resident big game license increased from $4 to $5; first use of SAK – sex-age-kill population-reconstruction technique for estimating deer numbers; hunters required to transport deer openly while driving to registration station; legislation authorizing unit specific quotas for antlerless harvest established.
1962 – Deer population above 400,000; deer management unit specific population goals established.
1963 – First year of quota party permits in eight management units; assassination of President Kennedy lessens hunting pressure.
1964 – Party permit quota extended to 32 management units.
1967 – Hunter Safety Education Program begins.
1970 – Registered gun kill is 72,844 with 501,799 licenses sold; 13 hunters killed.
1973 – No deer season fatalities.
1978 – Record registered gun kill is 150,845 with 644,594 licenses sold.
1980 – Blaze orange clothing required; first season of Hunter’s Choice permit; new law prohibits shining wild animals from 10pm to 7pm, Sept. 15 – Dec. 31; coyote season closed in northern management units to protect nascent wolf population.
1981 – Record registered deer kill of 166,673 with 629,034 licenses sold.
1982 – Another record registered gun kill of 182,715 with 637,320 licenses sold; three deer season fatalities.
1983 – Harvest continues to rise with another record registered gun kill of 197,600 with 649,972 licenses sold; experimental antlerless deer shunt in six southern management units to relieve crop damage.
1984 – Big jump in registered kill, fourth record harvest in a row of 255,726 with license sales totaling 657,969; handgun deer hunting allowed in shotgun areas; group hunting legalized.
1985 – Fifth consecutive record kill of 274,302 with 670,329 licenses sold; deer season extended in 21 management units; legislature further strengthens road hunting restrictions.
1986 – Gun deer season now nine days statewide; landowner preference program begins for Hunter’s Choice permits.
1987 – First year of bonus antlerless permits; seven fatalities and 46 hunting accidents.
1988 – Handguns permitted statewide.
1989 – Record registered harvest of 310,192 with 662,280 licenses sold; pre-hunt herd estimate of 1.15 million deer; two fatalities and 37 hunting accidents.
1990 – Another record kill of 350,040, including 209,005 antlerless deer; record license sales of 699,275; pre-hunt herd estimate of 1.3 million deer; season extended for seven days in 67 management units.
1991 – Third consecutive year of record harvest, 352,330; hunters allowed to buy more than one antlerless permit; season extended to 72 management units, mostly in the north; first year of separate, seven-day muzzleloader season.
1992 – Though kill fourth highest on record, 288,820, many hunters voice discontent over lack of success and claim DNR raised expectations by pre-hunt harvest prediction of around 370,000; hunters allowed to apply for bonus antlerless permits in more than one unit; Natural Resources Board approves Secretary’s recommendation to keep the gun season at nine days; new metro management units established around La Crosse, Madison and Milwaukee.
1993 – Harvest drops to 217,584, including 100,977 antlerless deer; pre-hunt herd population at 1 million with many units well below prescribed goals; 34 units, mainly in the north, designated as buck-only units; one fatality, 17 hunting accidents.
1994 – Hunters Choice permit availability jumps to 177,340 from 103,140 in 1993; six northwest management units remain buck only; herd beginning to build-up in southern agricultural range.
1995 – Harvest totals 398,002, a new state record; 32 accidents, one fatal; over 577,000 antlerless permits available with 414,000 plus applicants with 163,000 bonus permits offered to hunters; for the first time hunters can use their bonus or Hunter’s Choice permits in either the gun, bow or muzzleloader seasons.
1996 – ‘Earn a Buck” requirement placed on hunters in 19 deer management units situated in agricultural range where existing deer seasons and permit systems aren’t controlling herd growth; special four-day antlerless only season, state’s first October hunt since 1897, takes place in 19 ‘Earn a Buck’ units, resulting in a kill of 24,954 deer.
1997 – ‘Earn a Buck’ provision scuttled; early Zone T season in seven management units and three state parks results in over 7000 deer killed; the safest gun season even with one fatality and 10 accidents.
1998 – An early October gun season for third year in a row held in one management unit, 67A; harvest of 332,254 is fifth highest; accidents total 19 with two fatalities; most units in all regions of the state estimated to be above prescribed goals due to the mild winter of 1997-98.
1999 – Early antlerless Zone T deer season held in seven mainly east-central management units and one state park; early archery season is extended through Nov. 18 in Zone T units; pre-hunt herd estimate is 1.5 to 1.6 million deer; 33 management units in the central and southern part of the state are designated ‘watch unit’s that are above population goals and may be designated as Zone T units next year if quota numbers aren’t filled; resident deer license costs $20; non-resident license costs $135; record harvest of 402,204 deer.
2000 – Early four-day Zone T antlerless hunts produces kill of 66,417 deer; 97 of the state’s 132 deer management units listed as Zone T; two free antlerless permits given to all hunters buying deer-related licenses; hunters kill a record 528,494 deer during the early antlerless only, nine-day, muzzleloader and late antlerless only gun seasons; nine-day gun harvest totals a record 442,581 (170,865 antlered, 271,573 antlerless); 694,957 licensed gun hunters.
2001 – Wisconsin’s pre-hunt population estimated at 1.5 million deer; free antlerless permit given to all hunters buying deer-related licenses; 67 deer management units and nine state parks designated as Zone T; October and December four-day, Zone T antlerless hunts results in kill of 58,107 deer; nine-day gun harvest is the state’s fifth largest, totaling 361,264 (141,942 antlered, 219,260 antlerless); chronic wasting disease (CWD) later identified in three deer harvested in the Dane County Town of Vermont.
2002 – Herd estimate at 1.34 million deer; DNR  samples about 41,000 deer during the early Zone T antlerless hunt (Oct. 24-27) and opening weekend (Nov. 23-24) of the nine-day gun season to determine if CWD is present anywhere else in the state besides the Disease Eradication Zone in southwest Wisconsin; expanded hunting opportunities set-up in the CWD Management Zone and a gun deer season slated for Oct. 24 to Jan. 31 in the CWD Eradication Zone; October and November four-day, Zone T antlerless hunts in 25 deer management units produce a harvest of 36,228 deer; hunters register 277,755 deer during the traditional, nine-day season; number of licensed gun hunters drops about 10 percent with much of the decrease attributed to concerns about CWD.
2003 – Fall deer population estimated at 1.4 million; landowners in CWD Disease Eradication Zone (DEZ) can request free permits to harvest deer without a license and receive two buck tags per permit; earn-a-buck (EAB) rules in effect and no bag limits on deer in the CWD management zones; deer hunting license sales up 14 percent over 2002, but down 13 percent when compared to 2001; overall, DNR collects 15,025 samples for disease surveillance with 115 wild deer testing positive for CWD; all but two positives are from the Disease Eradication zones (DEZ) of southwest Wisconsin and Rock County; hunters killed 388,344 deer during the early antlerless only, nine-day gun, muzzleloader and land antlerless only deer seasons.
2004 – Many deer management units (DMU’s) in all regions of the state estimated to be above prescribed management goals with 48 DMU’s designated as Zone T and 26 units as EAB; fall deer population estimated at 1.7 million deer; hunters issued one free antlerless permit for each license type (archery or gun) up to a maximum of two; during all seasons, hunters in the CWD DEZ and much larger Herd Reduction Zone (HRZ) are required to kill an antlerless deer before harvesting a buck; hunters kill 413,794 deer during the early antlerless only, nine-day gun, muzzle loader, late antlerless only and CWD zone deer seasons; eight gun deer hunting accidents documented with two fatalities; all accidents are either self-inflicted or shooter and victim were in the same party; hunters set a new record of venison donations by giving 10,938 deer yielding nearly 500,000 pounds of venison for food pantries to feed needy people across the state.
2005 – Forty-five DMU’s designated as Zone T units with unlimited antlerless permits and expanded gun hunting opportunities; hunters issued  free antlerless permits for both archery and gun licenses; permits valid in any Zone T and CWD units; hunters in CWD units could get an unlimited number of antlerless permits at the rate of four per day; hunters harvest 387,310 deer during the early October, regular gun, late December and muzzleloader seasons combined, the eighth highest kill on record; 195,735 deer harvested during the opening weekend (Nov. 19-20) of the nine-day gun season; gun deer sales total 643,676, down one percent from 2004; DNR conducts CWD surveillance survey in the agency’s Northeast Region where 4500 deer are tested and CWD not detected; 14 accidents, including three fatals, during the nine-day season (Nov. 19-27); top five gun deer harvest counties – all located in central Wisconsin – are Marathon (15,871), Clark (13,918), Waupaca (12,260), Shawano (11,748) and Jackson (11,461).
2006 – Statewide harvest quota totals 469,385 antlerless deer; over 1 million antlerless deer permits issued to reach this quota; all hunters issued one free antlerless permit for each license type (bow and gun) with permits valid in any Herd Control, EAB and CWD units; hunters kill the fifth highest gun total (393,306) during the youth, regular gun, late December and muzzleloader seasons combined; 10 accidents, one fatal, with five self-inflicted and five with shooter and victim in the same party.
2007 – The 156th deer season; state’s deer herd estimated between 1.6 and 1.8 million animals heading into the regular nine-day (Nov. 17-25) gun hunt and the 23-day (Nov. 17-Dec.9) hunt in the CWD Zones; 57 of Wisconsin’s 130 DMU’s have EAB rules; more than 65,000 hunters “prequalified” for a buck sticker in 2007 by registering an antlerless deer during 2006; 40 DMU’s, many in the north, are on the “EAB Watch List” and may be EAB units in 2008 if antlerless kill isn’t sufficient.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Greg Matthews, DNR South Central Region public affairs manager – (608) 275-3317




2007 Report on groundwater conditions and protection activities now available
MADISON – Cleaning up nearly 600 contaminated sites, implementing a law to protect groundwater quantity, and increasing efforts to better understand and address groundwater contamination from manure are among the advances Wisconsin made in 2007 in protecting groundwater, according to a recently released report to the Wisconsin Legislature.
The report also summarizes major groundwater quality and quantity concerns in Wisconsin, including increasing threats from pesticides, viruses, and microbes, and recommends future directions for protection activities. The report can be found online at the Department of Natural Resources Web site: http://dnr.wi.gov/org/water/dwg/gcc/rtl/gccreport.htm.
Groundwater is drinking water source for 70 percent of all Wisconsin residents.
“Wisconsin has one of the nation’s most comprehensive groundwater protection and research programs. In 2007, we continued to make important progress in protecting this valuable natural resource that sustains our lakes, rivers, wetlands and springs, and in turn, sustains our quality of life,” says Todd Ambs, who leads the Department of Natural Resources Water Division and chairs the Groundwater Coordinating Council [http://dnr.wi.gov/org/water/dwg/gcc/index.htm.] the group that issued the report. 
The council includes representatives from state agencies and the University of Wisconsin system and is responsible for ensuring that the state’s groundwater research and policies are coordinated and cost effective and that state agencies provide consistent communications with the public. The report summarizes activities related to groundwater protection and management in fiscal year 2007, which runs from July 1, 2006, to June 30, 2007,
Anders Andren, director of the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Water Resources Institute, says that the 2007 report emphasizes the significant achievements that are possible through a comprehensive state-level-approach to protecting groundwater.
“In its first two decades, the Groundwater Coordinating Council has leveraged just $13.4 million in state money to obtain additional local and national funding in support of more than 330 research and monitoring projects addressing significant threats to Wisconsin’s groundwater quality and quantity,” he says.
Highlights include cleanups, research on virus and manure contamination of groundwater
Report highlights include staff work to write, and then implement, administrative rules for the new groundwater quantity law and work by an advisory committee to law makers to develop recommendations on how to carry out other parts of the law. Passed in 2004, this law provides additional protections when a new high capacity well is proposed near a high quality surface water in Wisconsin. 
2007 highlights include:
•   The cleanup of 586 contaminated properties in 2007, which brought to more than 14,000 the total number of sites certified by the DNR as cleaned up in Wisconsin.
•   Awarding 47 grants totaling $1.7 million 30 communities to help them investigate and remove tanks, drums and other abandoned containers, and making another $4.6 million available to start or continue clean up at sites where groundwater contamination is confirmed or suspected.
•   Re-prioritization of research needs resulting in funding for four new projects starting July 1 addressing contamination of private drinking water wells by improper manure spreading. More funding will be directed in 2008 toward projects aimed at better understanding viruses and bacteria contamination in groundwater and developing better tests to determine the extent of such contamination.
•   Creation of a Web site to make groundwater information and data accessible and useable by local governments and planners for their comprehensive planning processes, and for  citizens to understand groundwater contamination in their area. The Web site was developed by the Center for Land Use Education at UW-Stevens Point and the U.S. Geological Survey and is found at http://wi.water.usgs.gov/gwcomp
•   Distribution of more than 10,000 copies of a popular DNR publication on the uses of and threats to groundwater. Groundwater, Wisconsin’s Buried Treasure [http://www.wnrmag.com/supps/2006/apr06/using.htm] was also the basis for the training of teachers from 21 different schools and nature centers in using a groundwater model.
A new publication highlighting Groundwater Coordinating Council research and monitoring projects – and the state policies and groundwater management practices that sprang from them – can be found online at <www.wri.wisc.edu/ >.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeff Helmuth (608) 266-5234

Edited by Paul Holtan
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
PO Box 7921
Madison WI  53707-7921
(608) 267-7517
Fax: (608) 264-6293
E-mail: paul.holtan@dnr.state.wi.us
http://dnr.wi.gov/org/caer/ce/news/
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