April 18, 2017

Indiana Deer Harvest, Collisions With Vehicles Fell In 2016

stock photo

stock photo

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The Indiana Department of Natural Resources says the state's deer harvest fell last year, as did the number of deer struck by motor vehicles.

The department says in its recently released 2016 Indiana White-tailed Deer Summary that hunters last year harvested nearly 119,500 deer in Indiana. That was down 4 percent from the 2015 harvest of nearly 124,800 deer.

The 10 counties with the highest harvests were Harrison, Noble, Franklin, Washington, Steuben, Parke, Dearborn, Lawrence, Switzerland and Greene.

The agency says deer-vehicle collisions across Indiana numbered more than 14,000 last year, down nearly 9 percent from 2015.

The report contains other information on deer hunting, the use of depredation permits, deer-vehicle collisions, and disease surveillance efforts. The entire report is at www.deer.dnr.IN.gov under the "Deer Management" heading.

Support independent journalism today. You rely on WFYI to stay informed, and we depend on you to make our work possible. Donate to power our nonprofit reporting today. Give now.

 

Related News

Gen Z thinks Indianapolis’ vibe is OK, but there’s room for improvement
Purdue launches pilot program with a grand vision — roads that charge electric vehicles wirelessly
Reentry Resource Fair aims to help formerly incarcerated people return to society