Tag Archives: hunter-conservationist

The Key Deer and the Screwworm: How Science Saved an Endangered Species — and Why It Matters Again

This past December, I found myself in Big Pine Key, camera in hand, surrounded by the quiet beauty of Florida’s Key deer.

I was there with my friend and collaborator, Paul Fuzinski of Aptitude Outdoors and his wife Christina photographing and filming these animals as part of our ongoing work in wildlife documentary storytelling.

The tiny Key deer move differently than most whitetails—smaller, gentler, almost ghostlike as they slip between hardwood hammocks and pine rocklands.

And when I say tiny we’re talking a big buck tops out at round 60 pounds on the hook. They are the smallest subspecies of whitetail and are a federally endangered species.

In fact, standing there in the early light, it was impossible not to think about how close these deer once came to disappearing altogether.

Their survival is not accidental. It is the result of one of the most important — and often overlooked — wildlife conservation victories in North American history.

In the 1950s their population was down to 50 when the Boone & Crockett Club (B&C) donated $5,000 to hire a game warden named Jack C. Watson to protect them from poachers. Eventually, this action and his efforts were heralded as saving the species altogether.

This action of the B&C is virtually unknown outside of the club itself and a few people in the Keys. I found it out while doing some serious research on the species a few years ago. This is literally a case where hunters stepped in and saved a species outright.

Most recently, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) officials, Hurricane Irma in 2017 killed 21 deer with an additional dozen killed in the chaotic aftermath. With the latest estimates showing only 949, that hurts.

For perspective, I have hunted on a single 5,000 acre low-fence Texas ranch with more whitetails than that.

Additionally, an old foe last seen in the U.S. more than 30 years ago, hit the Keys hard in 2016. But Texans came to the rescue.

“Screwworms infested the population, which is spread across more than 20 islands. It led to 135 Key deer deaths, including 83 that were euthanized to reduce the risk of further infection,” said Dr. Roel Lopez. “This was a significant blow to a species, which is uniquely located in that area.”

Doctor Lopez is director and co-principal investigator for the Key deer study, San Antonio, a project of Texas A&M University (TAMU). TAMU, along with various agencies including USFWS, alleviated the crisis by preventive treatment and fly eradication efforts. This included feed stations lined with anti-parasitic medications and releasing 60 million sterile male screwworms to mate with wild female flies and curb reproduction.

That is a big effort for a little deer, but there is much love for them among those who understand their delicate existence. A single disease outbreak or storm could literally wipe out the population.

A more consistent issue is roadkill.

When we visited, the sign at the refuge headquarters said 121 were killed by vehicles in 2024 and by our visit Dec. 10, 2025 some 91 had been hit.

The National Key Deer Refuge was established in 1957 to protect and preserve the national interest the Key deer and other wildlife resources in the Florida Keys.

The Refuge is located on Big Pine and No Name Key and consists of approximately 9,200 acres of land that includes pine rockland forests, tropical hardwood hammocks, freshwater wetlands, salt marsh wetlands, and mangrove forests.

It gives them a place to exist but as roads intersect much of it, mortality is still an isssue.

In 2025 New World screwworm has been detected again in parts of Mexico, raising concerns among wildlife biologists, veterinarians, and agricultural officials.

History has shown that the screwworm does not respect borders. Left unchecked, it can move northward, re-establishing itself in regions where it was once eradicated.

For wildlife like the Key deer, the return of screwworm would be catastrophic. For livestock, it would represent billions of dollars in losses. And for conservationists, it would mean fighting a battle we already know is costly, complex, and urgent.

Standing in Big Pine Key this December, watching a doe and her fawn move through the palmettos, it was impossible not to think about how fragile recovery can be. Conservation victories are not permanent unless they are protected.

The story of the screwworm reminds us that vigilance is just as important as scientific innovation.

It also reminds us that many of the greatest conservation successes happen quietly, behind the scenes, through collaboration rather than controversy. Texas A&M’s role in eliminating the screwworm helped save not only the Key deer, but countless other wildlife species and agricultural livelihoods across the country.

The Boone & Crockett Club’s recognition of this effort underscores how deeply connected hunting heritage, science, and wildlife conservation truly are.

Paul and I left Big Pine Key with more than footage. We left with a renewed sense of responsibility to tell this story fully. In 2026 we will be producing a mini-documentary focused on the Key deer, not just their beauty, but the unseen threats they’ve survived and the people who stepped in when it mattered most.

The Key deer are still here because science, cooperation, and commitment won out over complacency. As the specter of screwworm once again looms to the south, their story serves as both a warning and an inspiration.

Sometimes saving wildlife isn’t about finding something new.

Sometimes it’s about remembering what almost happened and making sure it never happens again.

Chester Moore

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The Hunt Within Documentary Touts Conservation

The Hunt Within, the latest documentary from award-winning filmmaker Paul Fuzinski offers an in-depth and reflective look at the pursuit of hunting and its impact on wildlife conservation.

“My journey as a hunter has been one of discovery and a calling to wildlife conservation,” Fuzinski said.

“Being an active participant in nature changed my views of the importance of wildlife and its habitat and that brought me to the North American Model of Conservation which is a key part of The Hunt Within.”

Watch the documentary below.

This complex and highly effective model for conserving wildlife of which hunting is a major part has led to the comeback of everything from bison to bighorns but this film is not about facts and figures.

It has heart.

“A lot of people on the outside think of hunting as only about the kill and for me that’s the worst part,” said Renee Thornton, Chair of The Wild Sheep Foundation’s Women Hunt®

“Everything about the hunt is spectacular from dreaming about it to planning for it, getting your gear ready-all of it. And that’s why even if I’m not successful sometimes I’m just as happy because of the experience and the reverence we have for the resource.”

Higher Calling Wildlife® founder Chester Moore, who appears in the documentary said he believes it is a game-changer.

“It’s not a stereotypical hunting documentary and it’s certainly not the cut and paste hunting show you see on satellite networks. This is a personal journey of Paul’s that meets with the heart, passion and soul of others who love wildlife and also happen to hunt. I will be using this as a tool to show nonhunters in my life what hunting is really about.”

Chester is a passionate turkey hunter. Here he prepares for a long walk back to camp with an eastern turkey taken near Cato, NY. More than half of the meat consumed in the Moore household comes from his hunting and fishing ventures.

With interviews conducted at the Hunt-Fish Podcast Summit and high-level videography by Paul Fuzinski and Seth Geib, The Hunt Within highlights nature’s beauty and focuses on a system that promotes stewardship.

“I’m excited about continuing my journey and to see how people respond to “The Hunt Within. This is all about conserving wildlife, wild places and showing there is a system here in North America that is proven to save our natural heritage. And I believe that’s something we should get behind now more than ever.”

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Earth Day/Turkey Day

The shrill gobble carried across the 1/2 mile stretch of the valley with ease.

Positioned on a tall hill (by East Texas standards) my friend Josh Slone and I were pumped to get a response to our first call and it was loud!

The space between these hills and the creekbed below had been clear cut in the last six months and while that practice has questionable merit, the first year or so of a clear cut provides lots of new growth for turkeys, whitetails, and many other creatures.

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The decoy is set up, Josh is calling but once the gobbler saw the two hunters he was done. Hunting turkeys is anything but easy. (Photo by Chester Moore, Jr.)

This was a better start to the day than a public land hunt the day before where we saw plenty of sign, but no birds. My friend Derek York got a good luck at a gobbler and two hens but that was while he was transitioning between locations and wasn’t ready to take a shot.

Check out Derek York’s killer podcast “Impact Outdoors” here.

The same thing happened to me and Josh here on a private lease as later in the morning after seeing a couple of hens, we decided to move toward where we had heard the gobbler earlier and as soon as we went to stake out the decoy there he was.

At about 1/4 mile away he popped out of the woods and popped right back. A turkey’s vision is astounding and once he saw us we knew there was no chance he was coming back out no matter how much we called.

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A 2019 eastern turkey release in Titus County, Tx. (Photo by Chester Moore, Jr.)

This was a very special couple of days as we were hunting eastern turkeys in the Pineywoods of East Texas. A limited season for this subspecies exists in a handful of counties where restoration efforts by the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department and the National Wild Turkey Federation (NWTF) have boosted eastern numbers from near zero to around 10,000.

Restoration efforts continue with “super stockings” that are putting upwards of 80 birds in key locations to see eastern numbers expand in this vastly forested region.

On the way back from day two’s hunt, I realized we had been turkey hunting on Earth Day.

To me, it was a fitting way to celebrate the environment and enjoy God’s creation in a fun, exciting way.

In my opinion, as turkeys go, so do America’s forests.

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Until last year the only turkeys the author had hunted were Rio Grandes in his home state of Texas. He took this big eastern gobbler on a farm new Cato, NY with his friend Lou Marullo. The Moore family enjoyed the breast meat cut into strips and fried in batter. (Photo by Lou Marullo)

Where forests have either natural fires or controlled prescribed burns and trees adequate for roosting turkeys thrive. And in those same locations so do many other creatures including species of concern such as indigo snakes, the red-cockaded woodpecker, and gopher tortoises.

The difference is there are no groups willing to spend millions to help woodpeckers or indigo snakes, but there is a group that has hundreds of thousands of members and that spends millions helping turkeys-the NWTF.

Wildlife and its habitat need cornerstone species to inspire people to stand for their existence and proliferation. In the mountains, it’s bighorn sheep and in much of the rest of America’s forests, it’s wild turkeys.

Seeing eastern turkeys on a hunt just 75 minutes from my house in the eastern extremity of Texas was a dream come true. I will be returning numerous times to try and bag a bird and enjoy this pursuit that would have been impossible without the diligent efforts of hunter-conservationists.

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Big gobbler tracks found on a tract of public land in East Texas. (Photo by Chester Moore, Jr.)

I’m not one of those hunters who says that only hunters care about wildlife That’s nonsense. I know many nonhunters who do as well.

But I don’t know any group that has a hardcore contingent of conservationists willing to spend as much money, time, and effort on behalf of wildlife as hunters and fishermen in America.

It’s truly remarkable what this group of people have done for wildlife in the United States and beyond.

That’s why spending Earth Day hunkered down in the brush, calling out to turkeys in East Texas was so fitting for me.

I learned to conserve wildlife through hunting and fishing and to this day it remains a means of connecting with nature, collecting food for the table, and enjoy the outdoors to the max.

Thank God for the planet and for filling the forests of America with wild turkeys.

My life is better thanks to their existence.

Chester Moore

Chester’s Turkey Revolution project has hit many media outlets already in 2020 with a message of turkey conservation. Here’s where to find some of the articles and broadcasts.

You can subscribe to this blog by entering your email address at the subscribe prompt at the top right of this page. You can contact Chester Moore by emailing chester@chestermoore.com. Subscribe to the podcast by visiting thehighercalling.podbean.com.

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The Spring edition of Hunter’s Horn from the Houston Safari Club Foundation features Chester’s article “Call Of The Mountain Turkey” about the search for Merriam’s and Gould’s turkeys.

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April 2020 Texas Fish & Game features a photo of a gobbler photographed on Chester’s Turkey Revolution quest in 2019 and an article on  Easterns and Osceolas. This is part 1 of a three-part series on the Grand Slam of turkeys.

The Higher Calling Podcast: (Gould’s Turkey Episode)

The HIgher Calling Podcast: COVID-19 And The State of Turkey Conservation (With NWTF CEO Becky Humphries Episode)