Please Don’t Feed the Deer in Ocean Beach
An uncharitable charity
(Dan Malone, Park Ranger)
Many beautiful white-tailed deer live on Fire Island. Whenever people
and deer live as neighbors, controversy ensues. Perhaps the most harmful
human habit that affects this neighborly relationship is the act of
feeding deer. Most people who feed deer do so out of a misplaced love
for the animals, but in fact feeding creates a synthetic system that
affects deer numbers, behavior, and dispersal. During your time on in
Ocean Beach and Fire Island, we would like to encourage you not to feed
deer. By not feeding deer, you will help maintain natural systems for
the wildlife and reduce the potential for negative deer-people
interactions in residential areas.
Feeding deer disrupts natural systems by changing deer behavior,
population, and dispersal. Deer accustomed to being fed lose their
wariness of human beings. Fire Island deer come very close to people,
walking on boardwalks, and approaching cars on Robert Moses State
Parkway. Although New York State recently passed a law making it illegal
to feed wildlife within 300 feet of a state highway, feeding and
resulting deer kills in Robert Moses State Park continue to be a
problem.
If you live in Ocean Beach or on Fire Island, problems associated
with feeding deer may be less obvious than on the parkway, but they are
no less real. Some deer on Fire Island have died from accidents when
they have gotten their feet stuck in the top boards of walkways. Others
have been hurt, maimed, or killed when they have run into fences in the
communities. A few deer have also been poached (killed illegally) in
recent years, by means of hammer, axe, and bow. In the last year, there
have been reports of deer being taken solely for their antlers in some
Fire Island communities. Deer used to being fed by people are easier to
poach.
Feeding deer changes their population and dispersal (where they
live). Fire Island deer have no natural predators, so feeding them
artificially extends their lifespan, and it certainly changes their
dispersal. Between 1983 and 1991, deer population within the Fire Island
communities increased at an average annual rate of 23%. By contrast, the
deer population in the Fire Island Wilderness seems to be in balance.
Feeding deer increases damage to property and gardens in the
communities, and occasionally deer approach and aggressively push human
beings, looking to be fed.
On Fire Island, we are fortunate to be able to see white-tailed deer.
Feeding deer or any animals within the boundary of Fire Island National
Seashore is illegal. For your safety and that of the deer, please keep
deer at a distance. For further information, call the resource
management division at (631) 289-4810 Reprinted with
permission by the Fire Island National Seashore (FINS) (M.W.)