The 2019 spring turkey season saw an 11% increase over last year’s harvest with 17,929 turkeys taken.
The 2019 Youth and Apprentice weekend harvest was 623 birds, higher than 2018 (465), but similar to the 2017 harvest of 627 birds.
Turkey Biologist Gary Norman said the harvest was encouraging because reproduction was low in recent years, which would have predicted fewer 2- and 3-year old birds. These age classes typically comprise the majority of the harvest, and they normally gobble a lot, which is important to spring hunters.
Since younger gobblers are typically not with hens as much as dominant older birds, they are more likely to respond to hunters’ calls.
“We’ve experienced a long string of years with poor reproduction; we’re over-due a good hatch like the one we experienced in 2011,” Norman said. “Unfortunately, production in 2018 was particularly low, so hunters will be facing a tough year in 2020.”
More birds were harvested in counties east of the Blue Ridge (12,348, 69%) than west of the Blue Ridge Mountains (5,581, 31%). The eastern harvest was 18% higher than 2018, but the western harvest declined 2% in 2019. The North Piedmont and Tidewater Regions posted significant increases in 2019 (25% and 23%, respectively). A moderate increase (9%) was seen in the South Piedmont Region.
The North Mountain Region harvest was identical to 2018, while the Southwest Mountain Region declined 3%. The highest harvests were reported in Bedford County with 533 birds, Franklin County with 466 birds, and Southampton County with 441. The three counties with the most gobblers harvested per square mile of suitable turkey habitat were Northumberland (1.66), Lancaster (1.60), and Richmond (1.52), all on the Northern Neck.
County harvest totals are available here.
Turkey densities are best reflected by the harvest per square mile of suitable habitat. These data suggest Virginia’s Tidewater Region has the highest population densities (0.80 gobblers/sq. mile of suitable turkey habitat). The second tier of regions includes the South Mountain (0.48 gobblers/sq. mile suitable habitat), South Piedmont (0.47) and North Piedmont (0.42). The North Mountain (0.34) is a third tier.
Norman said “annual changes in harvests are driven by a number of factors like turkey population size, weather, and hunter participation rates. Long-term harvest trends are indeed more important than annual harvest changes.”
Over the past 10 years, population trends, based on spring gobbler harvest, have increased in the North Mountain Region (4%), North Piedmont (3.8%) and Tidewater Regions (2.4%). Population trends in the South Piedmont and South Mountain have been stable. Statewide, the spring harvest data suggests the population has been stable since 2010.
“Stable isn’t necessarily bad when we’re at record levels,” he explained.
Management of wild turkeys in Virginia is guided the Department’s Wild Turkey Management Plan.