Las Vegas Review-Journal

New regs might hook antler buffs

- By Ben Botkin Review-journal Capital Bureau

CARSON CITY — Hunters scour the Nevada wild, looking for fresh antlers that deer and elk have outgrown and shed.

The activity attracts everyone from hobbyists to commercial collectors hoping to discover a complete pair of elk antlers, which can sell for about $14 a pound.

“It’s like the world’s biggest Easter egg hunt,” said Tyler Turnipseed, Nevada’s chief game warden.

Collectors get creative in their hunting, said Cory Lytle, a member of the Lincoln County Advisory Board to Manage Wildlife.

“People are using dogs to collect antlers,” Lytle said. “They’re using drones. They’re using any means necessary.”

But hunters might have to plan trips around new restrictio­ns.

State wildlife officials are consid

ANTLERS

ering banning shed antler hunting from Jan. 1 through April 14. The Nevada Board of Wildlife Commission­ers will have an initial discussion about the proposal at its Friday meeting.

The move is aimed at helping the deer and elk population and habitat avoid disruption and strain during the lean winter months, Turnipseed said. It’s important that the animals’ foraging activity not be interrupte­d, he said. In Nevada, there are groups that come in from out of state to hunt shed antlers, sometimes for weeks.

“It’s kind of exploded in popularity in the last 10 years,” Turnipseed said.

Figures for shed antler hunters for Nevada are difficult to gauge because no state permit or license is required to hunt shed antlers.

The wildlife board passed a similar regulation in 2014, but it did not get final approval from the state’s Legislativ­e Commission.

In early February, Utah officials enacted a temporary closure on shed antler collecting, which spurred the industry in Nevada last winter.

“If we don’t have any stipulatio­ns on our side of the border, it’s just going to lead to more (Utah) residents coming over,” Lytle said.

Utah’s ban was put in place because of the season’s severe winter and precipitat­ion, said Mark Hadley, a Utah Division of Wildlife spokesman.

“I think the consensus here with the agency is we won’t be doing closures like we did last year,” he said. “We’re probably not going to do that. It’s going to have to be an extreme winter to do a closure.”

Contact Ben Botkin at bbotkin@ reviewjour­nal.com or 775-461-0661. Follow @Benbotkin1 on Twitter.

 ??  ?? Shed antler hunters look for the antlers that deer and elk have shed in the Nevada wild. Nevada Department of Wildlife photo
Shed antler hunters look for the antlers that deer and elk have shed in the Nevada wild. Nevada Department of Wildlife photo

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