He/She Deer

Road killed White-tailed deer near the Simpson Monument in Kootenay
National Park.

With the exception of caribou, females of the deer family do not possess
antlers. So you can imagine the surprise when park warden Harold Abbott
found this White-tailed deer “doe” with antlers. He noted that she must
have had a fawn, as there was still evidence of lactation. But the presence
of small antlers in velvet caused him some bewilderment!

Antlers are formed by short-term increases of growth hormones. Researchers (1)
have found "that female deer can have a testosterone surge caused by a
hormone imbalance, first pregnancy, tumors, or degenerative conditions of
the ovaries or adrenal glands. This single surge can cause the growth of
antlers in velvet. Usually these antlered females cannot produce enough
testosterone to complete the antler cycle; as a result, the antlers remain
soft and often permanent" like the ones on the deer that Harold found.

(1) Field Notes: Antlered Does
Christopher DePerno, DNR Farmland Wildlife Populations & Research Group
and Jonathan Jenks, South Dakota State University

הועלה ב-נובמבר 21, 2019 11:13 אחה"צ על ידי larryhalverson larryhalverson

תצפיות

תמונות/קולות

מה

אייל פרדי לבן-זנב (Odocoileus virginianus)

מתצפת.ת

larryhalverson

תאריך

ספטמבר 26, 2006 01:18 אחה"צ MDT

תיאור

Note the antlers on this road killed White-tailed doe .

See Journal https://inaturalist.ca/journal/larryhalverson/28958-he-she-deer

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