I don't know that survey numbers need to increase. Like I said, I don't know if the survey is statistically valid or not. May be for all I know.
I think everyone who has posted in the thread should take a few minutes and read the reports:
http://www.outdooralabama.com/research-mgmt/publications/Compiled%202011-2012%20Mail%20Survey.pdfA little copy and pasting for those who don't wanta click on the link:
>>>>Each year since 1963, the Alabama Division of Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries has conducted
a sample survey of licensed Alabama hunters to obtain information in the form of estimates for
the number of hunters, man-days of hunting, and harvest levels for each of the game species.
This year, survey forms were mailed to a stratified random sample of 8,930 drawn from the
249,686 Alabama hunting licensees. Of the 8,930 survey forms mailed, 720 were returned
undeliverable. A total of 3,097 completed survey forms were returned (34.7%) (37.7% of those
delivered). A sample is used because it is not practical to contact all hunters each year.
Because of this and other factors it is impossible to determine values that would be entirely free
of error. <<<
>>>Beginning with the survey for the 2002-2003
hunting season, the data has been analyzed by personnel with Auburn University’s School of
Forestry and Wildlife Sciences. The results of this and all past surveys are statistically valid and
of more value in defining trends over multiple hunting seasons rather than comparison of one
hunting season to another.<<<
A 1.2% sample is miles bigger than numbers used for things like presidential elections, and most folks seem to accept them. Their standard error for the statewide legal deer harvest by licensed hunters is 4.1%. When I was a graduate assistant at Auburn, the folks in charge of every study I worked on would have done cartwheels if they got 4.1%. I've always thought it was plenty good for estimating trends on statewide harvest, and the surveys say what all the hunters on here are saying - deer harvest is down.
If you don't believe the Hunter Survey can possibly be accurate with a 1.2% sample, then please don't even consider wasting your time on a soil test. Can you imagine how small your sample size is compared to the amount of soil in the entire field?
But for sure, the state's harvest estimation is not a "made up" number. Some form of random sampling is at the heart of almost every branch of science.