White Tailed Deer
                                                                     
                                                                                     



                                                                    
The White-tailed deer (Odocoileus                           
                                                        virginianus), also known simply as the                                   
                                             whitetail, is a medium-sized deer                                                      
                                      found throughout most of the continental United States, southern
Canada, Mexico, Central America and northern portions of South America as far south as
Peru.
     The species is most common east of the American cordillera, and is absent from much
of the western United States, including Nevada, Utah, and California (though its close
relatives, the mule deer and black-tailed deer, can be found there). It does, however,
survive in aspen parklands an deciduous river bottomlands within the Central and Northern
Great Plains, and in mixed deciduous riparian corridors, river valley bottomlands, and
lower foothills of the Northern Rocky Mountain Regions from Wyoming to Southeastern
British Columbia. The conversion of land adjacent to the Northern Rocky Mountains into
agriculture use and partial clear-cutting of coniferous trees (resulting in widespread
deciduous vegetation) is in favor of white-tailed deer in this region.
     The westernmost population, the Columbian white-tailed deer once was widespread in
the mixed forests along the Willamette River (Willamette Valley Forests Ecoregion) and
Cowlitz River Valleys of Western Oregon and Southwestern Washington (endangered).
     There are also populations of Arizona (coues) and Carmen Mountains (carminis)
white-tailed deer that inhabit the mountain mixed deciduous/pine forests of Arizona, New
Mexico, and West Texas extending southwards into Mexico.
     As a result of introductions, white-tailed deer are found also in localised areas of
northern Europe such as Finland.
     White-tailed deer are generalists and can adapt to a wide variety of habitats. Although
most often thought of as forest animals depending on relatively small openings and edges,
white-tailed deer can equally adapt themselves to life in more open savanna and even
sage communities as in Texas and in the Venezuelan llanos region. These savanna
adapted deer have relatively large antlers in proportion to their body size and large tails.
Also, there is a noticeable difference in size between male and female deer of the
savannas.

   
                                         Description
      White-tailed deer during late winter. The deer's coat is a reddish-brown in the spring
and summer and turns to a grey-brown throughout the fall and winter. The deer can be
recognized by the characteristic white underside to its tail, which it shows as a signal of
alarm by raising the tail during escape.
     The male (also known as a buck) usually weighs from 130 to 220 pounds (60 to 100
kg) but, in rare cases, animals in excess of 350 pounds (160 kg) have been recorded. The
female (doe) usually weighs from 90 to 130 pounds (40 to 60 kg), but some can weigh as
much as 165 to 175 pounds (75 or 80 kg).
     Males one year of age or older have antlers. Antlers begin to grow in late spring,
covered with a highly vascularised tissue known as velvet or, occasionally, moss. Bucks
either have a typical or atypical antler arrangement. Typical antlers are symmetrical on
both sides and the points grow straight up off the main beam. Atypical antlers are
asymmetrical and the points are going in any direction off the main beam. These
descriptions are not the only limitations for typical and atypical antler arrangement. The
Boone & Crockett or Pope & Young scoring systems also dictate what constitutes a
typical or atypical antler arrangement on a harvested or non-harvested buck by measuring
how many inches of antler are non-symmetrical. Therefore, bucks with slightly
asymmetrical arrangements are commonly referred to as typical. A buck's inside spread
can be any were from 3-25 inches (8-64 cm). Bucks shed their antlers when all females
have been bred, from late December to February.


                                              
Behavior and reproduction
     Females enter estrus, colloquially called the rut, in the fall, normally in late October or
early November, triggered mainly by declining photoperiod. Sexual maturation of females
depends on population density. Females can mature in their first year, although this is
unusual and would occur only at very low population levels. Most females mature at one or,
sometimes, two years of age.
     Males compete for the opportunity of breeding females. Sparring among males
determines a dominance hierarchy. Bucks will attempt to copulate with as many females
as possible, losing physical condition since they rarely eat or rest during the rut. The
general geographical trend is for the rut to be shorter in duration at increased latitude.
     Females give birth to one, two or even possibly three spotted young, known as fawns in
mid to late spring, generally in May or June. Fawns lose their spots during the first summer
and will weigh from 44 to 77 pounds (20 to 35 kg) by the first winter. Male fawns tend to be
slightly larger and heavier than females.
     Whitetails communicate in any different ways including sounds, scent, and marking. All
whitetail deer are capable of producing audible noises, unique to each animal. Fawns
release a high pitched squeal, known as a bleat, to call out to their mothers. Does also
bleat, as well as grunt. Grunting produces a low, guttural sound that will attract the attention
of any other deer in the area. Both does and bucks snort, a sound that often signals
danger. As well as snorting, bucks also grunt at a pitch thats gets lower with maturity.
Bucks are unique, however, in their grunt-snort-wheeze pattern that often shows
aggression and hostility.
     Antlered white-tailed deer Whitetails possess many glands that allow them to produce
scents, some of which are so potent they can be detected by the human nose. Three major
glands are the orbital, tarsal, and metatarsal glands. Orbital glands are found on the head,
and scent is deposited from them by rubbing the head, often the area around the eyes, on
hanging twigs. The tarsal glands are found on the lower outside of each hind leg. Scent is
deposited from these glands when deer walk through and rub against vegetation. The
metatarsal glands, found on the inside "knee" of each hind leg, are the most potent.
     During the breeding season, deer will rub-urinate, a process during which a deer
squats while urinating so that urine will run down the insides of the deer's legs. The deer
then rubs its metatarsal glands together, rubbing the urine into the tuft of hair found at this
location. Secretions from the metatarsal gland mix with the urine and bacteria to produce a
strong smelling odor. Also in breeding season, does release hormones and pheromones
that tell bucks the doe is in heat and able to breed.
     Markings are a very obvious way that whitetail communicate. Although bucks do most
of the marking, does visit these locations often. One form of marking is known as rubbing.
To make a rub, a buck with use its antlers to strip the bark off of small diameter trees,
helping to mark his territory and polish his antlers. Also to help mark territory, bucks will
make scrapes. Often occurring in patterns known as scrape lines, scrapes are areas
where a buck has used its front hooves to expose bare earth. Bucks usually then
rub-urinate into these scrapes and scrapes are often found under twigs that have been
marked with scent from orbital glands.


                                              
Range and population
      White-tailed deer fawn at Ricketts Glen State Park, PennsylvaniaCommercial
exploitation,unregulated hunting and poor land-use practices, including deforestation
severely depressed deer populations in much of their range. For example, by about 1930,
the U.S. population was thought to number about 300,000. After an outcry by hunters and
other conservation ecologists, commercial exploitation of deer became illegal and
conservation programs along with regulated hunting were introduced to solve the problem.
Recent estimates put the deer population in the United States at around 30 million. These
changes were so successful that, in their range, the white-tailed deer populations currently
far exceed their carrying capacity and the animal is considered a nuisance. Motor vehicle
collisions with deer are a serious problem in many parts of the animal's range, especially
at night and during rutting season, causing injuries and fatalities among both deer and
humans. At high population densities, farmers can suffer economic damage by deer
depredation of cash crops, especially in maize and orchards.
     The species is the state animal of Arkansas, Illinois, Mississippi, New Hampshire,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, South Carolina, and Wisconsin, as well as the provincial
animal of Saskatchewan. The profile of a White-tailed deer buck caps the Vermont
coat-of-arms and can be seen in the Flag of Vermont and in stained glass at the Vermont
State House. Texas is home to more white-tailed deer than any other U.S. state or
Canadian province, with an estimated population over four million. High populations of
white-tailed deer occur in the Edwards Plateau of Central Texas. Michigan, Minnesota,
Mississippi, New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania also boast high deer densities.
     White-tailed deer were introduced to Finland in 1935 . The introduction was successful,
and the deer have recently begun spreading through northern Scandinavia and southern
Karelia, competing with, and sometimes displacing, native fauna. The current population
of some 30,000 deer originate from four animals provided by Finnish Americans from
Minnesota.
     In many states in the U.S. and in several Canadian provinces, hunting for white-tailed
deer is deeply ingrained in local cultures and is central to the economy of many rural areas.
     There is a population of white-tailed deer in New York State that is entirely white
(except for areas like their noses and toes) - not albino - in color. The former Seneca Army
Depot in Romulus, New York, has the largest known concentration of white deer. Strong
conservation efforts have allowed white deer to thrive within the confines of the depot.
     In the western portions of the United States and Canada, the white-tailed deer range
overlaps with those of the black-tailed deer and mule deer. In the extreme north of the
range, their habitat is also used by moose in some areas. White-tails may occur in areas
that are also exploited by elk (wapiti) such as in mixed deciduous river valley bottomlands
and formerly in the mixed deciduous forest of Eastern United States. In places such as
Glacier National Park in Montana and several national parks in the Columbian Mountains
(Mount Revelstoke National Park) and Canadian Rocky Mountains (i.e., Yoho National
Park and Kootenay National Park), white-tailed deer are shy and more reclusive than the
coexisting mule deer, elk, and moose.

                                                              
Diet
Whitetail deer eat large varieties of plants, including shoots, leaves, and grasses. They
have a special stomach that allows them to eat some things that humans cannot, such as
mushrooms. Their diet varies in the seasons, like many deer do.


                                          Classification
      Fawn waving its white tail. Until recently, some taxonomists have attempted to
separate white-tailed deer into a host of subspecies, based largely on morphological
differences. Genetic studies, however, suggest that there are fewer subspecies within the
animal's range as compared to the 30 to 40 subspecies that some scientists described in
the last century. The Florida Key deer, O. virginianus clavium, and the Columbian
white-tailed deer, O. virginianus leucurus are both listed as endangered under the U.S.
Endangered Species Act. The dominant subspecies across the deer's range is the
Virginia white-tail, O. virginianus virginianus which is also the type species for the
Odocoileus genus. White-tailed deer have tremendous genetic variation and are
adaptable to several environments. Several local deer populations, especially in the
Appalachian Mountains and Piedmont Regions of Eastern United States are descended
from white-tailed deer transplanted from other areas. Some of these deer may have been
from northern mixed forests in the Great Lakes Region, or from more open savannas and
riparian bottomlands in the midwest and Texas, yet are also quite at home in the
Appalachian Mountains and Piedmont Regions. These deer over time have intermixed
with the local indigenous deer populations.
     Central and South America have a complex number of white-tailed deer subspecies
that range from southern Mexico as far south as Peru. This list of subspecies of deer is
more exhaustive than the North American list of subspecies and is also questionable, but
populations are difficult to study due to over-hunting in many parts and lack of protection.
Some areas no longer carry deer, so it is difficult to assess the genetic difference of these
animals. Central American white-tailed deer prefer tropical dry deciduous forests,
seasonal mixed deciduous forests, and savanna habitats over dense rainforests and cloud
forests.
     South American subspecies of white-tailed deer live in two types of environment. The
first environment is the savannas, dry deciduous forests, and riparian corridors of southern
Venezuela and eastern Colombia. The other environment is the higher elevation mountain
grassland/mixed forest ecozones in the Andes Mountains from Venezuela to Bolivia and
Peru. The Andean white-tailed deer seem to retain gray coats due to the colder weather at
high altitudes, whereas the lowland savanna forms retain the reddish brown coats. South
American white-tailed deer, like those in Central America, generally avoid dense
rainforests and cloud forests.
     Perhaps the biggest overall genetic distinction is between North American white-tailed
deer and the South American white-tailed deer.
     Male white-tail in KansasBelow is information on white-tailed deer classification and
taxonomy, and some of the subspecies of white-tailed deer.
                     
              *ALL INFORMATION COURTSEY OF TEXAS PARKS & WILDLIFE
*Special Youth Season  October
27-28,
Weekend after the close of the
general season
(January 12-13, or January 26-27)
*Regular Deer Season
South Texas (30 counties)
November 3-January 20