By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI
News staff
Turkey crossing a Charlestown kettle hole last week (Photo by Will Collette) |
“They get used to being
fed by people, and they don’t fear people and then they don’t leave,” said Josh
Beuth, wildlife biologist and head of the turkey program at the Rhode Island
Department of Environmental Management (DEM).
Many of these well-fed
birds feel comfortable around humans, as they roam backyards in Barrington and
parking lots on Reservoir Avenue in Cranston.
Despite regular
sightings, the number of wild turkeys in Rhode Island has fallen from its peak
of about 6,000 in 2001 to some 3,000 today.
Beuth said the drop-off isn’t
likely due to hunting or development but an influx of predators such as
coyotes, foxes and hawks that eat turkey chicks, called poults.
Eastern wild turkeys were reintroduced to Exeter in the early 1980s, as part of a DEM swap with Pennsylvania for snowshoe hare rabbits. Their numbers increased steadily as they discovered new territory with few predators.
Predators, though, soon
followed, so turkeys migrated to eastern Rhode Island. Today, wild turkeys can
be found across the state, except on Block Island and Prudence Island. Tiverton
currently has the highest wild turkey population, according to surveys and
public sightings.
Hunters now want to
expand turkey hunting to include crossbows. Currently, seasonal hunting is
allowed with a shotgun or bow and arrow.
For the second year, a bill was introduced in the General Assembly to allow hunting by crossbow. The bill changes state hunting laws to allow hunting of wild birds with a crossbow. If passed, the law would amend state hunting regulations to designate wild turkeys as the only wild bird to be hunted by crossbow.
For the second year, a bill was introduced in the General Assembly to allow hunting by crossbow. The bill changes state hunting laws to allow hunting of wild birds with a crossbow. If passed, the law would amend state hunting regulations to designate wild turkeys as the only wild bird to be hunted by crossbow.
Hunting-safety
instructor Jack Peters of Riverside noted that crossbows are safer than
shotguns, because they require less space than a firearm requires for
discharging. Crossbows also allow elderly and disabled hunters greater access
to hunting, he said.
“The crossbow is the
ideal device for harvesting a turkey,” Peters said.
Despite the state's
reduced turkey population, Beuth said the turkey broods are healthy and could
withstand a loss of 200 birds in each of the two annual hunting seasons.
Currently, only mature male turkeys can be hunted. In 2016, 122 turkeys were
taken by hunters in Rhode Island.
New Hampshire is the
only state in New England that allows wild turkey hunting by crossbow. Peters
said crossbow hunting of turkey would draw more hunters, just as it did with
deer hunting.
Deer hunting with crossbows was approved four years ago to cull populations and
curb the transmission of Lyme disease. While turkeys feed on some insects, but research is not conclusive that they eat
Lyme-carrying ticks.
Peters said proceeds
from hunting licenses support buying and protecting wildlife habitat. Hunting
also brings in hundreds of million of dollars to the local economy, he said.
“A lot of people have
become frustrated in the last few years because they can hunt deer with a
crossbow but not turkey,” Peters said.