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WILDLIFE
IN
RYERSONS WOODS
White-Tailed
Deer
Odocoileus
virginianus
Look out
for White-Tailed
Deer!
Bucks looking for mates from October to January have only
one thing on their mind. They don't watch out for cars when
they run into the street, so we have to watch out for them!
At 200-300
pounds, the bucks are the largest wildlife at Ryerson Woods;
does may weigh up to 250 pounds. With long thin legs, tawny
fur, white markings and regal stance, these graceful animals
have made Ryerson Woods and many of the surrounding suburbs
their home. Walking the trails in the morning or afternoon
in any season, you may see a small group browsing, or leaping
through the woods with their tails up, white fur flashing
as they go.
Deer eat
a variety of vegetation including leaves, berries, flowers,
nuts, and corn. In the winter they will chew on saplings,
twigs, tree buds, evergreen needles and will strip tree bark
when they are hungry. They are strong swimmers and will eat
aquatic plants as well. Deer usually bed down under cover
during the day to regurgitate and chew their cud.
Seven
months after mating in the fall and early winter, does go
off alone to give birth. Usually, the first year a single
fawn is born; following years, there may be twins or even
triplets if food is abundant. Does hide their spotted newborns
in thickets for the first month, feeding nearby and returning
frequently to nurse. Yearlings feed by themselves but will
rejoin their mother for the winter before permanently going
off on their own the next spring.
Except
during mating season, the bucks generally group separately
from the does and fawns. They begin to grow antlers in April
or May. The size and number of prongs isn't determined by
the age of the buck, but by the quantity and quality of food
that is available, their general health and genetics. A velvety
layer of skin and blood vessels covers and nourishes the growing
antlers. By August or September, they are fully grown and
the velvet covering starts to die and peel off. Antlers are
shed in late winter or early spring but they are rarely found
because mice, voles, squirrels and other animals will find
them first and gnaw at the antlers for nutrition.
Deer are
not usually physically aggressive. If startled, they would
prefer to set their ears back, stare, stomp on the ground
or snort. Though bucks may occasionally fight each other,
the white-tailed deer don't want to fight with us. If we aren't
frightened by their displays, and get too close, they will
probably flick up their tails and take off into the woods.
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White
Tailed Deer
(Jim Schultz, photographer)
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