Poor PPH does not necessarily mean poor nest success. Nests may hatch successfully, but high predation/poor poult survival might reduce the PPH number to <2. Doesn't mean we should stop worrying about nest success.
I'm curious where the 2023 nest success numbers Harper references came from? The thesis paper published a while back said they radio tagged/monitored turkeys from 2017-2022, with the delay in effect for '21 and '22. During those years, nest success improved significantly in the three delayed counties. I was hoping Harper would address/explain that, but I'm 2/3 finished with the podcast and he hasn't done so yet.
I hope Harper is right, but it's odd to me that he opposed the delay for years because he needed more time to gather and study data through the study. Now he wants to abandon the delay after one (1) year of statewide implementation. Just seems knee-jerk to me. Harper is clearly an accomplished biologist, and I'm not qualified to say he's wrong. But it seems odd to downplay the documented improvement in nest success shown in the study and declare that the season delay doesn't work after such a short time.