After two hard years of effort to
clear black locust, buckthorn, and other invasive vegetation
at Cook County's Bob Mann Woods Forest Preserve, the
payoff this summer should have been a profusion of Michigan
lilies and other wildflowers. Yet, lamented volunteer
steward Ed Hammer, "We never see them bloom. The
deer eat them."
This wasn't the first time Hammer's
excitement had been dimmed. In the spring, a secluded
glade usually sparkling with hundreds of early-blooming
wildflowers was picked clean by foraging deer.
This same scene is playing out in
forest preserves and backyards throughout Chicago Wilderness
as an uncontrolled suburban deer population continues
to explode, threatening both restoration efforts and
the health of the deer herds themselves.
Without natural predators, the deer
population overwhelms available habitat. And ecologists
say that restoration activities without deer control
can be wasted efforts.
"Things like buckthorn removal
and...burning regimens need to be coupled with aggressive
deer management to be effective," said Tim Van
Deelen, deer research specialist at the Wisconsin Department
of Natural Resources and former ecologist with the Illinois
Natural History Survey. "If you don't do enough
removal, the deer removal that you do might be irrelevant."

A "browse line" shows
how high the mouths of deer can reach. Beneath it, little
forest vegetation remains. Photo by Jim Nachel.
Deer are one of the greatest threats
to natural sites, hampering conservation efforts as
effectively as invasive species, development, and vandalism.
At the same time, however, deer have become icons as
one of the last vestiges of unsettled America and, as
such, have sparked contentious public policy debates
over just how the herds should be managed.
"Your biggest barrier is in
educating people that, for the sake of biodiversity
and the health and well-being of the deer themselves,
an aggressive removal program is needed," said
Van Deelen, who also serves as an adjunct assistant
professor for the University of Illinois and for the
University of Wisconsin.
In the absence of wild predators
and with the abolition of hunting in suburban areas,
deer thrive in an artificial landscape full of nutritious
foods. They live longer lives and reproduce quickly.
This has led to dangerously high densities of foraging
deer. The cud-chewing deer graze intermittently, one
plant here and another there, returning the next day
for more. Lacking top front teeth, the deer cannot bite
cleanly, but instead rip at leaves and stems, leaving
jagged edges. Eventually, the plants die, as pieces
are lopped off bit by bit, year after year. Lilies,
orchids, Solomon's seal, false Solomon's seal, trillium,
enchanter's nightshade, and tender young oak seedlings
are among the most popular items on the deer menu.
The deer are "like gourmets
at a cafeteria," said Joan Palincsar, volunteer
steward at Ryerson Conservation Area in Lake County.
"They go through and sample things, and if it tastes
good they eat more of it and remember it the next day
and come back and finish it."
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1992
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1994
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1996
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2003
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In 1992, when the Forest Preserve District
of DuPage County started deer control at Waterfall
Glen Forest Preserve, most vegetation outside
this deer enclosure had been browsed away (top
left). Over time, the plant species that survived
the overbrowsing are coming back. Photos
courtesy of Forest Preserve District of DuPage
County.
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Deer are primarily a species of
open woods and savannas, an "edge" species
that prefers disturbed areas on the fringes of forests.
Suburbia and farming have created more "edge"
environments, with a banquet of highly nutritious food
options that encourage robust deer to deliver multiple
births not just twins, but also triplets and
even quadruplets.
"You're talking suburban Chicago,
a relatively mild climate from the point of view of
deer, a virtually unlimited food supply year round,
and these deer are putting out fawns at almost the physiological
maximum for the species," Van Deelen said.
Management of deer is relatively
recent, starting locally in the late 1980s with the
creation of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources'
Urban Deer Project to study urban deer and prescribe
solutions. The agency created the project not just because
of damage to sensitive natural areas but also because
of rising numbers of deer-vehicle accidents (which reached
an all-time high of 2,063 in 1992 in Cook, DuPage, and
Lake counties) and alarming incidents of deer wandering
onto runways at O'Hare International Airport.
Deer Project studies included research
on deer diets, deer mortality rates, and a population
census. Most of the studies were done in Cook County
at Busse Woods, part of which is a dedicated nature
preserve, where the deer population amounted to an astonishing
100 deer per square mile. There, deer had stripped the
woods of vegetation. Skeletal-looking deer had resorted
to eating unpalatable buckthorn something akin
to desperate humans eating cardboard and were
peeling bark off mature elm trees until it hung in strips
like ribbon.
Investigators found that rural deer
forage across a larger range than urban deer, which
often don't leave their limited home range, even when
they are starving. They also found that in the stressed
urban herd, many fawns died, and deer that did survive
were stunted. When deer densities were lowered, however,
some of the plants began to grow again and deer became
healthier.
Some conservationists suggest that
recreational hunting is one of the most cost-effective
and natural ways to control deer, reflective of man's
historic role as predator and part of the ecosystem.
If designed and carried out with respect for the animal
and the ecosystem, it could become a part of the emerging
metropolitan culture of nature conservation.
According to Van Deelen, however,
"In Chicago Wilderness, where the emphasis is on
native biodiversity and not on recreational hunting,
you almost can't marshal enough effort to be effective
at culling deer."
Since 1993, a total of 5,786 deer,
most of them females, have been removed via culling
from forest preserves in Cook, DuPage, and Lake Counties
districts that, in the absence of regular hunting,
rely most heavily on culling programs. Of these, 1,617
were culled from Cook, 3,782 from DuPage, and 387 from
Lake. The meat is donated to food pantries. Costs of
deer management, including hiring of contractors to
do the culling, range anywhere from about $100 to nearly
$500 per deer removed. Costs depend on how many deer
are culled (the more deer that are culled, the lower
the costs per deer), the size of the preserves, and
the ease of finding deer.
Over the last decade, deer-control
protestors initially slowed the deer culling programs
in Cook, DuPage, and Lake Counties. Protesters also
recently, albeit unsuccessfully, challenged efforts
by the Indiana Department of Natural Resources to allow
hunting in state parks, including Indiana Dunes State
Park, located outside of Chicago.
The ambivalence about deer culling
is understandable. As Illinois' largest free-ranging
mammal, deer provide an emotional tug and feed into
some people's notions of what is "natural."
On another level, people perceive them as pets. Like
birds at the bird feeder, people like to see them and
want to help them.
Rural people have quite a different
perception. Many talk about a "oneness with nature"
that recreational hunters experience. And many hunters
have a sophisticated appreciation of the role of human
predation in the ecosystem. In rural areas, the average
person sees hunting as natural, but a consensus on the
role of deer in a suburban metropolitan culture has
yet to emerge.
The McHenry County Conservation
District started a hunting program on one site in the
winter of 2001. Last winter, the district opened two
sites for hunting. District records show that 46 archers
shot 17 deer, and 29 firearms hunters shot 20 deer.
Minus expenses, the district netted almost $7,800 from
hunting permits.
In Indiana, hunting is allowed at
Indiana Dunes State Park, where officials say the annual
cost to control the deer population is a few hundred
dollars a year. The state does not put a quota on how
many deer should be killed, but it adjusts the number
of hunters allowed, as well as the number and type of
deer they can take. This fall, two separate groups of
95 hunters each will be allowed at Indiana Dunes State
Park. Hunting is not allowed at nearby Indiana Dunes
National Lakeshore, where biologists are working to
determine the effects of deer on the habitat there and
assess best-practice management solutions.
Ironically, overhunting in past
decades almost led to the deer's extinction. Native
Americans used deer for food, clothing, and tools. White
settlers also wanted venison and hides for leather.
By the end of the 1800s, deer were nearly extinct in
much of the nation, including Illinois. By the 1900s,
legislation had begun to put limits on hunting, and
deer were reintroduced to many parts of the country.
People began moving to the cities, where they developed
a romantic ideal of nature as a sanctuary. Then came
Bambi. Walt Disney's fantasy of the cruel hunter blasting
away the noble, peaceful deer helped create a culture
of antagonism to hunting. Deer numbers rebounded, and
by the mid-to-late 20th century, deer overpopulation
had become a problem in many areas.

From time to time, nature lives
up to society's romantic ideal, as suggested in this
real-life Bambi-meets-Flower scene. The daily reality,
however, is a vastly more complex, difficult, and beautiful
thing. Photo by Alan G. Nelson/Root Resources.
Historians have estimated that between
23 and 35 million deer roamed the nation circa 1500
to 1800. No one knows how many deer are in the region
or nation today, and biologists suggest that it doesn't
matter. What does matter is damage at individual sites.
"A broad-scale deer census
is not all that important to have," said Marty
Jones, manager for the Urban Deer Project. "If
we had, say, 10,000 deer in Cook County, how much difference
would it be if we had 15,000 or 5,000? We have to focus
on the localized overabundance where they are perceived
as a problem."
"Deer are beautiful, fascinating
creatures and I just can't help but like them,"
volunteer Palincsar said. "But I can also see the
damage that they do. The deer determine how tall many
of the plants grow, determine whether they bloom or
not, and, in some cases, they determine whether they
exist or not. Much as we like the deer," she said,
"in certain places, there are just too many of
them."