Animal Damage - What can you do?
Animal
damage, whether from deer, rabbits, mice, or
other rodents, degrades the beauty and
health of the plants you paid and cared for.
A large Rhododendron can become an unsightly
pile of sticks in one evenings browsing.
Additionally, all the plants stored energy
must now be diverted from other essential
areas such as defense, reproduction, etc..,
to fuel wound closure and regrowth of fuel
producing leaf tissue. This continual
drain of a plant's resources weakens its
capacity to resist normal disease and insect
pressures. Furthermore, each wound
opened presents the perfect pathway for
entry of systemic diseases which, have no
cure.
Likely Culprits
Whitetail Deer
Deer most
often damage plants by browsing new leaf
tissue, buds, and small twigs. This is where
a substantial portion of stored energy in
the form of sugars and starches is located.
Male deer also damage trees and shrubs by
territorially rubbing their antlers on bark
tissue, sometimes girdling and killing the
plant.
Under heavy pressures, deer can eat entire
shrub beds down to stubs in a few days browsing. A Whitetail Deer needs
6-8 lbs of food daily. One should consider what 6-8 lbs of buds and
twigs from your plants would look like. Secondly, consider what 3 to 4
deer could eat overnight.
Deer resistant shrubs
should be the first option in a multi-tiered control strategy.
Rabbits
While
rabbits obviously do not eat the same
quantity as deer, the way they feed is
much more damaging to a plants long term
health and growth. Rabbits will both
browse bud and twig tissue, as well as
eat bark tissue from select plants. This
removal of bark severely restricts food
and fluid movement throughout plant.
Often the branch or entire plant may be
girdled and killed. Sometimes
damage goes unnoticed, as most damage
occurs on lower branches and trunk,
obscured by snow or vegetation.
Mice and Other Rodents
Like rabbits,
most damage occurs on the bark tissue of the
plants interior. Mice and other rodents also
feed on root tissue where available. Often
times, dense plants cannot be treated with
repellants effectively. In these situations,
population control with traps or baits, is
the most effective solution.
Control Solutions
Plant Selection
Effective
management often begins before
installation. Deer resistant plant
species should be selected whenever
possible to minimize future problems and
associated costs. The location of more
desirable plant material should also be
scrutinized.
Temporary Fencing
Sites with
exceptionally heavy pressures or a
history of severe recurrent damage
should be considered for fencing. An 8ft
nylon fence on metal stakes or poles is
installed in late fall around damage
prone plants or beds. Fencing is
monitored through winter and removed in
spring as native food sources resume.
Fencing can also be applied around the
trunks of valuable trees in late summer
to prevent buck rub damage.
Repellants
For most
purposes repellants are classed into two
groups: seasonal and dormant. Seasonal
repellants are applied throughout the
growing season and conditions the deer that
plants are unpalatable in odor and taste.
These repellants are generally organic and
do not harm the animals if ingested. These
repellants do not typically last as long as
dormant repellants and must be reapplied as
growth occurs.
Dormant Season Repellants
These are
generally chemically based and very long
lasting when mixed and applied
correctly. These repellants can impact
photosynthesis and transpiration and
should be applied when growth stops for
the season. Typically late fall and mid
winter are optimum treatment times for
pressured areas.
Please be aware
that repellants will reduce damage, usually
quite significantly. However, they should
not be considered deer proofing. When
animals are faced with bad taste or
starvation...survival wins. Both repellants
discussed are also effective against rabbits
and rodents. |