- Harvest and Population Trends - Wisconsin
Population Statistics Trends Fawn to doe ratios and yearling buck percentages are used to help estimate the deer herd size annually and is the starting point for setting antlerless harvest quotas
- Harvest Statistics - Wisconsin
Harvest Statistics
- Population Statistics - Wisconsin
Population Statistics
- Wisconsin Recycling Trends and Behaviors Executive Summary
Questions on the 2021 survey asked about recycling behaviors, attitudes, and knowledge regarding recyclables Additionally, the survey asked about backyard burning, food waste, household item disposal, and electronics Analysis of responses related to electronics recycling is covered in a separate report (Trends in Wisconsin households' ownership and disposal of electronics: Results from the
- Deer Statistics - Wisconsin
Under such stable conditions, managers have found that buck harvest trends closely track deer population trends Information from harvest registration and aging, along with other data, is used in a mathematical population model called the Sex-Age-Kill (SAK) formula
- Wisconsin Recycling Trends and Behaviors - apps. dnr. wi. gov
2021 survey questions asked about recycling behaviors, attitudes, and knowledge regarding materials banned from Wisconsin landfills, including cardboard, metal containers, glass containers, and plastic containers #1 and #2 Additionally, the survey asked about backyard burning, food waste, household items, and electronics Analysis of responses related to electronics recycling (e-cycling) is
- Deer Statistics - Wisconsin
However, trends in roadside observations of does and fawns, especially in forested regions, have tended to match expectations based on other measures of nutritional condition of the herd and severity of winter weather
- Microsoft Word - SilverForest_2016_LetterReport_v2. docx
WDNR LONG-TERM EWM TRENDS MONITORING RESEARCH PROJECT Starting in 2005, WDNR Science Services began conducting annual point-intercept aquatic plant surveys on a set of lakes to understand how EWM populations vary over time This was in response to commonly held beliefs of the time that once EWM becomes established in a lake, its population would continue to increase over time Because the
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