White-tailed Deer
White-tailed deer are found throughout much of North America, including most of the United States, southern Canada, and Central America. They are also found in the northernmost regions of South America.
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Cervidae
Genus: Odocoileus
Species: O. virginianus
Common Names: White-tailed Deer, Whitetail, Virginia Deer
White-tailed deer are found in a number of different habitats throughout their broad range. They can be found in forests, as well as more open grasslands or sage habitats. They eat plants, including leaves, grass, shoots, nuts, berries, and even cacti. They can even consume toxic mushrooms and poison ivy.
The white-tailed deer has many natural predators: gray wolves, mountain lions, alligators, and jaguars all prey on adult deer. Grizzly bears, wolverines, coyotes, lynxes and bobcats are known to prey on younger deer (called fawns).
White-tailed deer have a mostly brown colored coat, that is more reddish in the warmer months, and more gray in the colder months. They are named for the bright white fur on the underside of the tail. The white becomes very visible when the deer raises its tail, which it does to signify warning or alarm.
Males are known as bucks, and can grow to weigh over 300 pounds. Females, called does, average around 100 pounds. Bucks have a set of antlers that are shed and regrown every year.
The white-tailed deer is the state animal of many states, including Arkansas, Georgia, Illinois, Michigan, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Hampshire, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and South Carolina. It is also the national animal of Costa Rica and Honduras.
One of the most popular fictional white-tailed deer is Bambi, the title character of the famous Disney animated film. The movie changed the character from a roe deer (which are native to Europe) to a white-tailed deer, as the audience for the film at the time was mostly viewers in the United States.
White-tailed deer were long in danger of being overhunted. By the mid-1900s, the total U.S. white-tailed deer population was estimated at around 300,000. Conservation efforts helped deer populations recover, and it is now a species of Least Concern. The U.S. population is now believed to be in the tens of millions.
References
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White-tailed_deer
Macdonald, David W. (editor). (2006). The Princeton Encyclopedia of Mammals. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press.
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