Thursday 17 May 2012

DEER




FAWN FIRST STEPS


The deer family is one of the most widely spread animals from  Europe, North Africa, Asia to the North and South American continents. They also had been introduced to Australia and New Zealand. There are 36 species.Only deer grow antlers which is a bony structure on the head. Every year they shed them and then grow them afresh with covered velvet. Eventually this dries and they rub it off. During the mating season, also called rut, the male use it to fight off his opponent.  It can happened that Red deer with their enormous antlers can get themselves so entangled that they can't come apart anymore and sadly they both die of starvation.
Mostly the male is called a buck and the female a doe while the young one is a fawn. The exception is the red deer where the male is called a stag or hart. The reindeer, caribou, elk and moose; the male is called a bull, the female a cow and the young one a calf.









Deer usually live in big herds and move from place to place in search of food. Their diet is grass, bark, buds, shoots and leaves of bushes and trees.
The two most wide spread deer in Europe is the fallow deer which is 79-91cm high at the shoulder. The handsome looking red deer measures 125cm tall.

FALLOW DEER

Fallow deer live wild in southern Europe, Turkey and north-western Africa.  In Europe they live in parks.  Red deer are living in the wild throughout most of Europe, north-western Africa and Iran. In Northwest Africa they are called Barbary stags.

REINDEER

The reindeer, which are part of the family, are in Lapland the most important animal. Their warm, hairy coat is on top of a thick layer of fat. These two things help them to survive the harsh environment of the Arctic. Their large feet are act like a snowshoe and with the sharp edge of their hoof they can cut the ice like skates.  They supply milk, hides and meat to the people living there
ELK

The European elk is the largest of all deer. It measures 2m high. They live in broad-leaved woodlands, marshes and peat bogs and are to be found in Scandinavia, Eastern Europe and Siberia. It is also a closed relative to the American moose.





BARASINGHA
The Asian deer is the large barasingha or swamp deer of India. They are even larger than the sambar which weighs up to 320kg and lives in India, Sri Lanka, South-East Asia, China and the Philippines. The chital or axis deer is the most beautiful one and lives in India and Sri Lanka. It has white spots on a reddish-brown coat. The herd can be up to a 100 strong and they move all the time in search of food.
MUNTJAC
In contrast is the tiny Indian muntjac which is not taller than 50cm. It is also called the barking deer because it has a dog-like bark. The horns are small but it can defend itself with its sharp pair of tusks. The Chinese water deer is of the same size.







PUDU - THE SMALLEST DEER

The southern pudu is one of the few species of South American deer. It lives only in the extreme south of Chile and Argentina.





PERE DAVID'S DEER
The Pere David's deer is a very rare breed. It was named after a missionary priest who saw it for the first -time in 1900.  It became extinct in China.  Luckily a herd was kept in Woburn by the Duke of Bedford in England. The herd bred so well that they supply zoos. This deer would not have been around if it was not for conservation and it is a great success story.






ROEBUCK

Roebucks have small antlers with knotty protuberances at the base. It also has only three points and it is typical of the species. The family of the Roe deer is the American deer even so they are extinct in America.
Deer are necessary in the woodlands because they keep the saplings (young trees) down otherwise the forests would be overgrown. However, if they grow to a great number they achieve the opposite effect and almost ruin a forest.  A forester does a great job to keep the number at a correct level. 
They are shy and it is sheer luck if you can see one. There sharp hearing and smell alarms them of danger well ahead. The communication ranges from little bleats to loud bellows, especially during the mating season. They are also migrating animals because of their search of food and in winter travel a long distance.
Their social habits vary from species to species and it also depends on the availability of food. When food is thinly scattered they live in small groups. The deer which live in open grassland have much larger groups. In most groups the male and female live in separate groups until the mating season. The male group also has one hierarchy which is the largest and strongest,
They mostly breed in the autumn and the male is very aggressive, vigorously defending its mate or a group of females or his territory from other males. The gestation period varies between species and is from 25 to 40 weeks. Usually a single calf is born and the female hides it very well in a thicket and only goes there to suckle the baby. It will join the mother and the herd, when it is strong enough. It will be still suckling during that time for several months

No comments:

Post a Comment