Florida deer hunters will see benefit as zones, dates change
News Release
Thursday, September 23, 2010
Media contact: Stan Kirkland, 850-265-3676
Although hunting season dates for wildlife
management areas are slightly out of sync with the zonal hunt dates
on private lands, the situation is only temporary. By next year,
hunting season dates will be more closely aligned with the rut -
the period when deer are breeding.
In February 2010, the Florida Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Commission (FWC) voted to realign the state's deer
hunting zones, including creation of a fourth zone. The zones
have been renamed A-D.
Most of the former Northwest Hunting Zone is now
Zone D. The Central Zone was renamed Zone C.
The line dividing zones C and D begins at U.S. 27
at the Gadsden County-Georgia state line and runs south on U.S. 27
until it meets State Road 61 in Tallahassee. From there it
follows S.R. 61, running south until it hits U.S. 319. It
follows U.S. 319 south to U.S. 98; then east along U.S. 98 before
turning south on Spring Creek Highway and continuing to the Gulf of
Mexico.
"The changes to the state's hunting zones align the
deer hunting seasons more closely with the rut," said Cory Morea,
deer management coordinator for the FWC's Division of Hunting and
Game Management.
The new deer hunting zones and season dates for
private lands are in the 2010-2011 Florida Hunting Regulations
handbook, as well as online at MyFWC.com/Hunting. However,
some hunters are asking the FWC why wildlife management area hunt
dates are slightly out of sync with the zonal hunt dates.
"Adjusting hunting season dates was designed to be
a two-phase project," Morea said. "In 2009, FWC staff worked
with stakeholders, held several public meetings and incorporated
public comments to adjust zones and zonal seasons. We have
since been working with stakeholders, cooperators and the public on
adjusting seasons on WMAs.
"You can call this a 'transitional year.' The
2011-2012 deer hunting seasons on WMAs will more closely match the
dates for the new statewide zones," Morea added. "However,
there still will be some differences between WMAs and zonal
seasons, since hunter preferences are being used to set season
dates."
In 2008, the FWC approved a new deer management
plan that outlines a 10-year strategic direction. The
adoption of new deer hunting zones and seasons is the latest of a
number of projects related to the plan. The entire plan, including
proposed season dates for 2011-12, can be viewed at
MyFWC.com/Deer.