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\n:[i][b]Stag[/b] redirects here. For other senses of that word, see stag
(disambiguation). [b]Fawn[/b] redirects here. For the mythical creature,
see faun.[/i]\n\nA [b]deer[/b] is a ruminant mammal belonging to the
family Cervidae. A number of broadly similar animals, from related
families within the order Artiodactyla, are often also called
[i]deer[/i].\n\nDepending on the species, male deer are called
[b]stags[/b], [i]harts[/i], [i]bucks[/i] or [i]bulls[/i], and females are
called [i]hinds[/i], [i]does[/i] or [i]cows[/i]. Young deer are called
[i]calves[/i] or [b]fawns[/b] (not to be confused with [i]fauns[/i], a
kind of nature spirit). [i]Hart[/i] is an expression for a stag,
particularly a Red Deer stag past its fifth year. It is not commonly used,
but an example is in Shakespeare\'s \"Romeo and Juliet\" when Tybalt refers
to the brawling Montagues and Capulets as [i]hartless hinds[/i]. \"The
White Hart\" and \"The Red Hart\" are common English pub names.\n\nDeer
are widely distributed, with representatives in all continents except
Australia, Antarctica, and Africa. Australia does have six introduced
species of deer that have established sustainable wild populations from
Acclimatisation Society releases in the 19th Century. These are Fallow
Deer, Red Deer, Sambar Deer, Hog Deer, Rusa deer, and Chital Deer1.
Although exotic to the continent, environmental factors restrict their
ranges to habitable patches, thereby preventing any one species from
becoming a serious pest. Red Deer introduced into New Zealand in early
1900s (a gift from United States President Theodore Roosevelt) have been
largely domesticated in deer farms since the late 1960s and are common
farm animals there now.\n\nDeer differ from other ruminants in that they
have antlers instead of horns. Antlers are bony growths that develop each
year (usually in summer) and, in general, it is only male deer that
develop them (although there are exceptions). A young buck\'s first pair
of antlers grow from two tiny bumps on their head that they have had from
birth. The antlers grow wrapped in a thick layer of velvet and remain that
way for one month, until the bone inside is hard; later the velvet is shed.
During the mating season, bucks use their antlers to fight one another for
mates. The two bucks circle each other, bend back their legs, lower their
heads, and charge.\n\nA doe usually generally has one or two fawns at a
time (triplets, while not unusual, are much more infrequent). The
gestation period is anywhere between 160 days (just over 5 months) in the
musk deers to ten months for the roe deer. Most fawns are born with their
fur covered with white spots, though they lose their spots once they get
older (excluding the Fallow Deer who keeps its spots for life). In the
first twenty minutes of a fawn\'s life, the fawn begins to take its first
steps. Its mother licks it clean until it is almost free of scent, so
predators will not find it. Its mother leaves often, and the fawn does not
like to be left behind. Sometimes its mother must gently push it down with
her foot. The fawn stays hidden in the grass for one week until it is
strong enough to walk with its mother. After two days, a fawn is able to
walk, and by three weeks it can run and jump. The fawn and its mother stay
together for about one year. They then go their separate ways. A male
usually never sees his mother again, but females sometimes come back with
their own fawns and form small herds.\n\nDeer generally have lithe,
compact bodies and long, powerful legs suited for rugged woodland terrain.
Deer are also excellent swimmers. Their lower cheek teeth have crescent
ridges of enamel, which enable them to grind a wide variety of vegetation.
Deer are ruminants or cud-chewers and have a four-chambered stomach. Nearly
all deer have a facial gland in front of each eye. The gland contains a
strongly scented substance called pheromone, used to mark its home range.
Bucks of a wide range of species open these glands wide when angry or
excited. Except for the musk deer, all deer have a liver without a
gallbladder. The musk deer, along with the Chinese water deer also differ
from other species in that they have no antlers and bear upper canines
developed into tusks.\n\nThere are about 34 species of deer worldwide,
divided into two broad groups: the old world group includes the
subfamilies Muntiacinae and Cervinae; the new world deer the subfamilies
Hydropotinae and Capreolinae. Note that the terms indicate the origin of
the groups, not their modern distribution: the Water Deer, for example, is
a new world species but is found only in China and Korea.\n\nIt is thought
that the new world group evolved about 5 million years ago in the forests
of North America and Siberia, the old world deer in Asia.\n\nThe family
Cervidae is organized as follows:\n*Subfamily Hydropotinae\n**Chinese
Water Deer ([i]Hydroptes inermis[/i])\n*Subfamily Muntiacinae (mostly
Muntjacs)\n**Bornean Yellow Muntjac ([i]Muntiacus atherodes[/i])\n**Black
Muntjac ([i]Muntiacus crinifrons[/i])\n**Fea\'s Muntjac ([i]Muntiacus
feae[/i])\n**Gongshan Muntjac ([i]Muntiacus gongshanensis[/i])\n**Indian
Muntjac ([i]Muntiacus muntjac[/i])\n**Leaf Muntjac ([i]Muntiacus
putaoensis[/i])\n**Reeves\' Muntjac ([i]Muntiacus reevesi[/i])\n**Truong
Son Muntjac ([i]Muntiacus trungsonensis[/i])\n**Giant Muntjac
([i]Muntiacus vuquangensis[/i])\n**Tufted Deer ([i]Elaphodus
cephalophus[/i])\n\n*Subfamily Cervinae\n**White-lipped Deer or Thorold\'s
Deer ([i]Cervus albirostris[/i])\n**Philippine Spotted Deer or Visayan
Spotted Deer ([i]Cervus alfredi[/i])\n**Barasingha ([i]Cervus
duvaucelii[/i])\n**Red Deer ([i]Cervus elaphus[/i]) -- called elk or
wapiti in America\n**Thamin ([i]Cervus eldii[/i])\n**Philippine Sambar or
Philippine Brown Deer ([i]Cervus mariannus[/i])\n**Sika Deer ([i]Cervus
nippon[/i])\n**Sunda Sambar or Rusa deer ([i]Cervus
timorensis[/i])\n**Sambar Deer ([i]Cervus unicolor[/i])\n**Chital ([i]Axis
axis[/i])\n**Calamian Deer ([i]Axis calamianensis[/i])\n**Bawean Deer
([i]Axis kuhlii[/i])\n**Hog Deer ([i]Axis porcinus[/i])\n**Père
David\'s Deer ([i]Elaphurus davidianus[/i])\n**Fallow Deer ([i]Dama
dama[/i])\n**Persian Fallow Deer ([i]Dama mesopotamica[/i])\n*Subfamily
Odocoilinae \n**Roe Deer ([i]Capreolus capreolus[/i])\n**Moose
([i]Alces alces[/i])\n**Mule Deer ([i]Odocoileus
hemionus[/i])\n**White-tailed Deer ([i]Odocoileus
virginianus[/i])\n**Pampas Deer ([i]Ozotoceros bezoarticus[/i])\n**Red
Brocket ([i]Mazama americana[/i])\n**Merioa Brocket ([i]Mazama
bricenii[/i])\n**Dwarf Brocket ([i]Mazama chunyi[/i])\n**Grey Brocket
([i]Mazama gouazoubira[/i])\n**Pygmy Brocket ([i]Mazama
nana[/i])\n**Yucatan Brown Brocket ([i]Mazama pandora[/i])\n**Little Red
Brocket ([i]Mazama rufina[/i])\n**Northern Pudu ([i]Pudu
mephistophiles[/i])\n**Southern Pudu ([i]Pudu pudu[/i])\n**Marsh Deer
([i]Blastocerus dichotomus[/i])\n**Peruvian Guemal or North Andean Deer
([i]Hippocamelus antisensis[/i])\n**Chilean Huemul or South Andean Deer
([i]Hippocamelus bisulcus[/i])\n**Caribou/Reindeer ([i]Rangifer
tarandus[/i])\n\nDeer are selective feeders. They feed on leaves. They
have small, unspecialised stomachs by herbivore standards, and high
nutrition requirements: ingesting sufficient minerals to grow a new pair
of antlers every year is a significant task. Rather than attempt to digest
vast quantities of low-grade, fibrous food as, for example, sheep and
cattle do, deer select easily digestible shoots, young leaves, fresh
grasses, soft twigs, fruit, fungi, and lichens.\n\nDeer have long had
economic significance to humans. While they are generally not as easily
domesticated as sheep, goats, pigs, and even cattle, the association
between people and deer is very old. Deer meat, for which they are hunted
and farmed, is called venison.\n\nMusk, which comes from the gland on the
abdomen of musk deer, is used in medicenes and perfumes. Deerskin is used
for shoes, boots, and gloves, and antlers are made into buttons and knife
handles. The Saami of Scandinavia and the Kola Peninsula of Russia and
other nomadic peoples of northern Asia used reindeer for food, clothing,
and transport. The caribou is not domesticated or herded as is the case in
Europe but is important to the Inuit. Most commercial vension in the United
States is imported from New Zealand. Deer were originally brought to New
Zealand by European settlers, and the deer population rose rapidly. This
caused great environmental damage and was controlled by hunting and
poisoning until the concept of deer farming in the 1960s. Deer farms in
New Zealand number more than 3,500, with more than 400,000 deer in
all.\n\n\nHybrid deer\n\nIn [i]Origin of Species[/i] (1859) Charles Darwin
wrote \"Although I do not know of any thoroughly well-authenticated cases
of perfectly fertile hybrid animals, I have some reason to believe that
the hybrids from Cervulus vaginalis and Reevesii [...] are perfectly
fertile.\" These two varieties of muntjac are currently considered the
same species.\n\nA number of deer hybrids are bred to improve meat yield
in farmed deer. Once considered separate species because of the great
differences between them, American Elk (or Wapiti) and Red Deer from the
Old World can produce fertile offspring, and are now considered one
species. (The European Elk is a different species and is known as moose in
North America.) The hybrids are about 30% more efficient in producing
antler by comparing velvet to body weight. Wapiti have been introduced
into some European Red Deer herds to improve the Red Deer type, but not
always with the intended improvement.\n\nIn New Zealand, where deer are
introduced species, there are hybrid zones between Red Deer and North
American Wapiti populations and also between Red Deer and Sika Deer
populations. In New Zealand Red Deer have been artificially hybridized
with Pere David Deer in order to create a farmed deer which gives birth in
spring. The initial hybrids were created by artificial insemination and
back-crossed to Red Deer.\n\nIn Canada, the farming of European Red Deer
and Red Deer hybrids is considered a threat to native Wapiti. In Britain,
the introduced Sika Deer is considered a threat to native Red Deer.
Initial Sika Deer/Red Deer hybrids occur when young Sika stags expand
their range into established red deer areas and have no Sika hinds to mate
with. They mate instead with young Red hinds and produce fertile hybrids.
These hybrids mate with either Sika or Red Deer (depending which species
is prevalent in the area), resulting in mongrelization. Many of the Sika
Deer which escaped from British parks were probably already hybrids for
this reason.\n\nIn captivity, Mule Deer have been mated to White-tail
Deer. Both male Mule Deer/female White-tail and male White-tail/female
Mule deer matings have produced hybrids. Less than 50% of the hybrid
fawns survived their first few months. Hybrids have been reported in the
wild but are disadvantaged because they don\'t properly inherit survival
strategies. Mule Deer move with bounding leaps (all 4 hooves hit the
ground at once, also called \"stotting\") to escape predators. Stotting is
so specialized that only 100% genetically pure Mule Deer seem able to do
it. In captive hybrids, even a one-eighth White-tail/seven-eighths Mule
Deer hybrid has an erratic escape behaviour and would be unlikely to
survive to breeding age. Hybrids do survive on game ranches where both
species are kept and where predators are controlled by man.\n\n\nFictional
deer\n\n\n\n*For role of deer in mythology, see deer in mythology.\n*In
Christmas lore (such as in the narrative poem \"A Visit from St.
Nicholas\"), reindeer are believed to pull the sleigh of Santa Claus.
\n*One famous fictional deer is [i]Bambi[/i]. Contrary to what most people
believe, in the Disney movie [i]Bambi[/i], he is a white-tailed deer, while
in Felix Salten\'s original book [i]Bambi, A Life in the Woods[/i], he is a
roe deer.\n*In [i]The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe,[/i] a white stag,
said to grant one wish to the one who catches him, misleads the Pevensie
children in the forest. Lost, they stumble back through the wardrobe to
return to our world, ending their adventure.\n*Saint Hubertus saw a stag
with a crucifix between its antlers while hunting on Good Friday and was
converted to Christianity by the vision.\n*In [i]Harry Potter and the
Prisoner of Azkaban[/i], the Patronus Charm that Harry Potter conjures up
to scare away the Dementors is a silver stag. James Potter, Harry\'s
father, had an Animagus form as a stag.\n*On the television series
[i]Angel[/i], one episode depicts the hart as the last of three animals
symbolically representing the evil law firm of Wolfram & Hart.\n*In one of
the stories of Baron Munchhausen, the baron encounters a stag while eating
cherries and without ammunition. He fires the cherry-pits at the stag with
his musket, but it escapes. The next year, the baron encounters a stag with
a cherry tree growing from its head; presumably this is the animal he had
shot at the previous year.\n*A Samurai warrior named Honda Tadakatsu
famously adorned deer antlers on his helmet.\n*Deer has been a subject in
Chinese painting numerous times as a tranquility
symbol.\n\nCategory:Deer\nCategory:Even-toed
ungulates\n\nbg:???????\ncy:Carw\nda:Hjorte\nde:Hirsche\neo:Cervedoj\nes:Ciervo\nfa:????\nfr:Cervidae\ngd:Fiadh\nhe:???????\nhu:Szarvas\nio:Cervo\nit:Cervidae\nja:??\nko:??\nla:Cervidae\nlt:Elniniai\nms:Rusa
sambar\nnl:Hertachtigen\npl:Jeleniowate\npt:Cervidae\nru:????????\nsv:Hjortdjur\nth:????\nzh:??\n\n\nThe
Wikipedia article is licensed under http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html
and uses material from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fawn. A preview of
this article is available at http://www.blinkbits.com/en_wikifeeds/Fawn.\n
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