A distinguished deer manager with many years experience, alongside none other than the late, great Ronnie Rose, once told me deer management is management with a very small 'm'. In forestry, where damage prevention is the main objective, if you are seeing deer about there are too many. Of all the advice, reading, and education I have had in the 20 some years since these have been the truest words I've heard.
You can take ratios, age spilts, density, whatever you like, but if you think you can talk with ANY confidence on any of these things and tinker with them regarding a wild forest population then you are deluding yourself. How can you make such precise determinations when you don't even know the population size, let alone its structure.
Too much BS talked about deer management. If you have too many deer, shoot more. If you don't have enough deer, shoot less. And what is 'too many' or 'too few' will depend on your objectives.
As for the 50/50 split, in all honesty I have no idea what the structure is. All I do know is I don't see significantly more does than bucks.
Keep it real fellas, and don't trip yourselves up on the details you can never have any more than a best guess at (park, farm, and open hill deer excepted).
Wolfie